The game opens on, predictably, the moon in the near future. A science base has been erected, and the scientists have discovered Lost-like hatches scattered across the lunar surface. A team is sent down to investigate, but true to genre convention, they disappear. You are called in to provide reconnaissance and, hopefully, find your missing colleagues. Down the hatch you go, and in doing so you step into a heavily fortified world patrolled by drones and extraterrestrial soldiers armed to the hilt and ready for war. As you explore the machinery-packed corridors, you discover a terrible extraterrestrial plot and the records of the soldiers who came before you.
Most of the time you are confined to subterranean facilities, and this is where the game excels. Like Dementium before it, the control scheme has been lifted from Metroid Prime Hunters, minus the ability to jump. Switching weapons is seamless, as you merely touch the weapon icon and then slide your stylus to the weapon you want. Different firearms are gained slowly, but all the normal FPS weapons eventually show up: pistol, shotgun, sniper rifle, grenade launcher, etc. They are created from alien technology, though, and look really cool. Renegade Kid thought outside the box here—I especially like the look of the Lepton Spread (shotgun). A particularly ingenious feature in Moon is a controllable reconnaissance droid that can scope out maintenance tunnels. The Remote Access Droid (RAD) is equipped with its own stun gun and can get through any given area pretty quickly. Most often, the RAD is used for disabling force fields, though there are times where the player will have to switch from RAD to soldier and back again to get through an area. The RAD is also useful for finding alien artifacts and other pickups. Walking is initially jarring in that your soldier bobs up and down almost as though he were floating in water. He definitely has a bounce to his step that’s difficult to ignore at first, but you quickly get used to it.
Shooting things is a little frustrating sometimes—the farther the object, the less accurate your shot. This seems logical until you actually experience it. You’ll be aiming in the right spot but still somehow miss the mark. Also, boss fights are best fought from a distance, making the overall loose aiming unnecessarily annoying.
Speaking of the boss fights, they’re really hard. Except for maybe two of them, these brawls will take awhile. First, the bosses tend to have tons of health. Second, their attacks are very damaging. Third, and perhaps most importantly, they tend to spawn helper droids to assist in mauling you. Some players will like the challenge, but I really hate dying six times before succeeding. What’s also irritating is that there is a dearth of boss types. For instance, you’ll fight one particular boss three times, each incarnation more annoyingly difficult than the last. Happily, the final boss is prone to getting stuck in animation loops, so he’s easy pickin’s compared to his subordinates.
Moon has a second side that’s not quite as fun as the FPS stuff: driving a Warthog around the surface. Now, it’s called LOLA in the game, but it feels like the Warthog from Halo. The little rover works pretty well. It’s just that there are arbitrary and frustrating time limits into the LOLA missions. That, in addition to unfortunately-placed checkpoints, makes getting from place to place kind of a hassle. The rover isn't game-breaking, and it is wisely confined to the first third of the game, but the whole driving experience would’ve been a lot more enjoyable without the time limits. There is also one bug with the rover that can end your game. It's actually an easy fix, though, so it's not as bad as it could've been.
The game looks incredible for a DS game and lasts as long as a console FPS. Finding all the journal entries, alien artifacts, and HP/ammo expansions might take some time, although none of them are terribly hard to find. For every three alien artifacts you discover, a bonus mission is unlocked in Quick Play mode, so the total number of stages in the game is much larger than how many are in Adventure Mode. There is no multiplayer option, which is kind of disappointing in that it limits the game’s replay value significantly, but there’s still a lot of content. The save system is competent, with save points scattered throughout each level, and the map is awesome. Thus, my biggest complaints regarding Dementium have been tactfully taken care of here.
Moon is a great first person shooter for the DS, despite some unfortunate design decisions. It's up there with Metroid Prime Hunters and Call of Duty 4. Well, aside from the timed driving.
Pros:
Lastability: 7.0
Moon’s hard mode really is hard, so the Adventure mode will last you a long time. After you collect all the alien artifacts, the bonus missions will provide a lot more content, most of it just as fun as the main game.
Final: 8.0
Moon is one of the system’s best first person shooters. While it has no multiplayer, the story is engaging, the gunplay is fun, and it’s impressively long.
I should mention that if you report a glitch to Renegade Dog and they confirm it, they will ship you a clean copy once it's manufactured.
Some players will like the challenge, but I really hate dying six times before succeeding.