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Rayman 3 - Hoodlum Havoc (USA)

PlayStation 2
🇩🇪 🇬🇧 🇪🇸 🇫🇷 🇮🇹
Reviewed in
2003
90
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✪ Reviewed on March 11, 2025
88

Rayman 3 Hoodlum Havoc leans into slapstick action and colourful powers. Snappier than Rayman 2, gag-packed and set in a sparkling Glade. A breezy platformer that goes down easy.

Your verdict
Category
Platformer 4 players 7+
Description
A 3D sequel by Michel Ancel and Ubisoft Paris released in 2003 (Korea, Europe, US), the third Rayman entry. André the Hoodlum, a shadow eater, has transformed the Glade of Dreams inhabitants into threatening Hoodlums. Varied themed levels (gothic, American, medieval), dense visual humor and refined platform gameplay.

Rayman 3 - Hoodlum Havoc review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
3/5
Story
"Solid"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾2,4 GB 📅21/03/2003
Published by Ubisoft

Rayman 3 - Hoodlum Havoc (PS2) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The third 3D Rayman by Michel Ancel, leaning more on humour and action than its predecessors. Sold in volume across all territories, it stays very common and economical, with no scarcity to justify a price. Its desirability lies in ranking as the last great auteur 3D Rayman before a long series hiatus, a heritage interest more than a speculative one.

Better with friends

A 3D platformer sparkling with humor, whose side modes and minigames add a convivial multiplayer dimension. The collective fun comes from the score challenges you set each other and the laughter at the hero's zany transformations. Light and bursting with character, it favors good-natured fun over fierce competition, and happily restarts to compare your runs in a relaxed mood.

Is Rayman 3 - Hoodlum Havoc still worth playing in 2026?

Released in 2003 on PS2, Ubisoft's project extends the series with a three dimensional platformer of a more comic and zany tone than its predecessors. The temporary powers picked up through the levels, which transform Rayman's fists, vary the approaches and the pace. The colourful, polished art direction and a scoring system that rewards combos add relief. The heavy humour and a few uneven sequences divide. Less iconic than Rayman 2, the whole stays a generous and solid platformer, recommended for fans of the genre and for followers of Ubisoft's mascot who enjoy a lighter, more playful tone.

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