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pider-Man 2 (2004 video game) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search Spider-Man 2 Spider-Man 2 Game Cover.jpg Developer(s) Treyarch The Fizz Factor (PC/Mac) Vicarious Visions (NDS/PSP) Digital Eclipse (GBA/N-Gage) Publisher(s) Activision Aspyr (Mac) Director(s) Tomo Moriwaki Phillip Trumbo (Microsoft Windows) Producer(s) Jeremiah Maza Jonathan Zamkoff Nick Doran Gregory John Bill Dugan Rodney Gibbs, Ellen Hobbs (Microsoft Windows) Designer(s) Akihiro Akaike Scott Laing (Microsoft Windows) Programmer(s) James Fristrom, Michael Vance (PS2/GC/Xbox) Chad Goolbis, Scott Graessle, Marshall Kunze, Jeff Lafitte, Jim Loecke, Acy James Stapp (Microsoft Windows) Artist(s) Alexandre Bortoluzzi James Chao Scott White, Jason Gary (Microsoft Windows) Writer(s) Matthew Rhoades Rodney Gibbs (Microsoft Windows) Composer(s) Michael McCuistion The Distillers Noel Gabriel (Microsoft Windows) Engine Treyarch NGL (consoles) Unreal Engine 2 (Microsoft Windows) Vicarious Visions Alchemy (NDS/PSP) Platform(s) Game Boy Advance GameCube Microsoft Windows PlayStation 2 Xbox N-Gage Mac OS X Nintendo DS PlayStation Portable Release Game Boy Advance, GameCube, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2 & Xbox NA: June 28, 2004 EU: July 9, 2004 N-Gage EU: July 2, 2004 NA: July 6, 2004 Mac OS X NA: 2004 EU: 2004 Nintendo DS NA: November 21, 2004 AU: February 24, 2005 EU: March 11, 2005 PlayStation Portable NA: March 23, 2005 EU: September 1, 2005 Genre(s) Action-adventure Mode(s) Single-player Spider-Man 2 is a 2004 action-adventure video game, based on the film of the same name. Published by Activision, the console versions were developed by Treyarch, while the others had different developers and are drastically different as a result. The game is the sequel to Spider-Man (2002), itself based on the film of the same name. The Treyarch-developed versions are considered a landmark title in the industry for being the first superhero video game to incorporate a full open world design. All versions of the game closely follow the film's plot, but expand upon it by including scenes and characters not featured in the film. Set two years after the events of Spider-Man, the game finds Peter Parker struggling to manage both his personal life and his duties as Spider-Man. When scientist and Peter's mentor, Dr. Otto Octavius, becomes the diabolical villain Doctor Octopus after an accident, Spider-Man must stop him from recreating a dangerous fusion power experiment. Tobey Maguire, Alfred Molina, Kirsten Dunst and J. K. Simmons (PSP version only) reprise their roles from the film, as Spider-Man, Doctor Octopus, Mary Jane Watson and J. Jonah Jameson, respectively, while Bruce Campbell, who played an usher in the doors of Mary Jane's show, narrates the game. The game was released on June 28, 2004 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, Xbox, Game Boy Advance and GameCube, followed by N-Gage and Nintendo DS versions, both released later in the same year. A PlayStation Portable version, which uses the same engine and graphics as the first game, was released almost one year later, on March 23, 2005. The Game Boy Advance version, developed by Digital Eclipse, was re-released on a twin pack cartridge and bundled with that system's version of the 2002 Spider-Man game in 2005. A tie-in game, titled Spider-Man 2: Activity Center, was also released in June 2004. The console versions of the game were positively received, with critics commending the realistic Manhattan setting and web swinging mechanics. It has been called one of the best superhero games of all time, with some crediting the game for helping revolutionize the open world genre. The handheld versions received mixed reviews, while the PC version received largely negative reviews. The game was followed by Spider-Man 3 in 2007, itself based on the film's sequ