Parameters | Values |
---|---|
File Name: | Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban (UE) (M8).zip |
Console/System: | GBA |
Genre: | Role-Playing |
Filesize: | 12.25MB |
Region: | USA |
Year of release: | 2004 |
Downloads: | 12963 |
Published by EA Games and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment and co-developed by three teams (Griptonite Games, EA UK, and KnowWonder) collectively, Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban is based on 1999 J.K. Rowling's novel. The 3rd installment in the Harry Potter series was launched in 2004 for the GBA gaming console platform. The game was established as a triplet, with segmented versions for GameBoy Advance, Microsoft Windows, and home consoles (delivered on GameCube, PlayStation 2, and Xbox). The class of the game likewise varied between stages. Simultaneously, the console launch was a customary 3D over-the-shoulder viewpoint, highlighting boss battles and investigator areas. The PC rendition included comparative puzzle settling missions as those in previous adaptations. The Game Boy Advance delivery is assumed as a conventional Role-playing game, like games like Dragon Quest.
The game's plot is based on J.K. Rowling's 1999 novel of a similar name and the film transformation. The games follow Harry Potter alongside Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger as they re-visit Hogwarts school of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Detainee Sirius Black has gotten away from the wizard jail Azkaban and is prepared to assault Harry in Hogwarts. The game starts on the Hogwarts Express, overlooking the occasions at Harry's home. After arriving at Hogwarts, these three follow the novel's events and learn sorcery from their classes.
The game got moderately positive review scores by critics and fans around the world. GameSpot provided an aggregate scoring of 7.5/10 across its releases, with a positive score of 8 out of 10 for the GBA gaming console.
Popular and exciting games like the Harry Potter series require an easy-to-use interface that you can only experience in the GBA emulators. You can empower ROM patches with this emulator and abrogate any game you need, an uncommon feature available in GBA emulators. Regardless of whether your operating framework is old or new, it doesn't make a difference as the GBA emulator underpins every operational framework and permits more casual games. With upgraded shading proliferation, you get a profoundly nitty gritty presentation of any game you get with a GBA emulator. Audio and Video recording support is the best specification with these emulators. There are some GBA emulators for various working frameworks: DreamGBA, BatGBA, Higan, etc.