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Upcoming Games: "The Amazing Spider-Man" in 3D.
Spider-Man must contend with more than just a lizard in his latest video game adventure.
The  web-slinging superhero will also face off against Rhino, Iguana and  Felicia Hardy in "The Amazing Spider-Man," the upcoming free-roaming  action game from Activision Inc. based on director Marc Webb's film of the same name. The game, created by Canadian developer Beenox, will serve as an epilogue to the movie starring Andrew Garfield as Peter Parker.
The  3-D flick, which also features Emma Stone as Parker's gal pal Gwen  Stacy and Rhys Ifans as Dr. Curt Connors, who transforms into the  Lizard, doesn't hit theaters until July 3. But the game is set for  release June 26 for the Nintendo DS, 3DS, Wii, Xbox 360 and PlayStation  3.
The developers at Beenox insist the game's story won't ruin the movie.
"The  fact that our game is based on the movie, and the movie is  re-approaching the universe in a completely different way — a more  grounded, more realistic approach — gives us an incredible setting to  play with," said Beenox  studio head Dee Brown. "This allows us to approach combat and all sorts  of things in a different way that makes it really fresh."
To create a more realistic rendition of Spidey, the developers crafted a virtual Peter Parker  that will show injuries he's sustained from battling foes in the form  of bloody bruises, heavy breathing and scratches on his uniform. He'll  also rent his own apartment in the game's take on Manhattan and use a  smartphone that allows him to tap into a fake Twitter feed.
Brown  said the developers at Beenox, who previously worked on the comic-based  Spidey games "Edge of Time" and "Shattered Dimensions," met with "The  Amazing Spider-Man" filmmakers from Marvel Studios and Sony Pictures at  the beginning of the game's development to understand their version of  the superhero tale, as well as present their own ideas.
"They  really liked our story, and how we're approaching Gwen and Connors and  the relationship between all those characters based on what they're  doing in the movie," said Brown at last month's Game Developers  Conference. "They've been really supportive of what we've been doing  with things like adding additional Marvel characters like Rhino."
To expand the scope of Spider-Man's  more naturalistic interactive escapade, Beenox's developers re-imagined  zany old-school Spidey villains like Rhino and Iguana as Oscorp  experiments gone awry.
They're also unleashing a white-hot rendition of Hardy, the sultry heiress-turned-burglar known as Black Cat, to spar with Spider-Man.
"Because  we've based our story after the movie, it's allowed us a world of  opportunity from a creative standpoint," said Brown. "We can go anywhere  from there. That's something we did at the beginning of development,  and we made that clear with Marvel and Sony. We were able to make the  game we wanted to make while being inspired by the movie universe."
Seemingly  taking a cue from Rocksteady Studios' critically acclaimed Batman games  "Arkham Asylum" and its sequel "Arkham City," Beenox is using a slick  combat system in "Amazing Spider-Man"  that resembles the Dark Knight's counter-heavy fighting technique — but  with a few Spidey flourishes, like finishing off baddies by wrapping  them in a web.
"I played both Batman games and liked them," said Brown. "For me, the Spider-Man  character is very different than Batman. You have to approach both in a  different way. I think the Rocksteady guys did a good job at providing  what was required to make a great Batman game, and we're doing  everything we need to this time to make a great Spider-Man game."


