Incredible Hulk, The - Ultimate Destruction (Europe)
Xbox
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Reviewed in 2005
84
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✪ Reviewed on November 30, 2024
78
Hulk mass destruction game in destructible cities. The sense of power is unmatched, fights against massive bosses are satisfying. The freedom to destroy entire buildings is exhilarating. One of the most fun superhero games.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player12+
Description
Bruce Banner and his alter ego the Hulk traverse a fully destructible city and desert to confront General Ross and uncover the origin of the Devil Hulk. Published by Vivendi Universal Games, released in 2005 in the United States and Europe. Open world with buildings to climb and demolish, a skill upgrade system, numerous side missions, and joyful destruction physics.
Incredible Hulk, The - Ultimate Destruction review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
3/5
Music
★★★★★
"Memorable"
3/5
Story
★★★★★
"Solid"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Embodying a superhuman force of destruction in a fully destructible city, where you leap onto skyscrapers, rip vehicles apart to use as weapons and pulverise everything in your path: the release is total. The freedom to smash everything delivers an immediate, exhilarating glee. Spectacular, generous and furiously fun, a sandbox of pure chaos.
A Radical sandbox where you unleash the green giant's strength to pulverize an entire city, often cited as the best game ever drawn from the character. Distributed in the West, its appeal lies in this tenacious reputation and a markedly rarer Asian pressing rather than mass distribution. A piece valued by fans of open-world destruction and successful licensed games.
Is Incredible Hulk, The - Ultimate Destruction still worth playing in 2026?
Released in 2005, Radical Entertainment's project remains one of the very few games that truly captured what playing Hulk should feel like. Climbing skyscrapers, folding cars into boxing gloves and the near total urban destruction build a genuinely euphoric playground. Progression unlocks grappling moves and combos that meaningfully extend replay value. The visuals and some mission types have aged and the camera can lose its mind in big brawls. Still recommendable today for superhero fans, lovers of physical open worlds and anyone nostalgic about Radical Entertainment's golden run.