
The brawling in Ghost Rider isn’t truly bad though. For the most part, the game alternates between them, a structure that initially helps them both avoid growing too stale, but the endgame begins piling on the on foot stages a bit too much.

Ghost Rider levels come in two different types, on foot brawler stages and levels where you ride your motorbike.

It’s likely his appearance is done to assure story parity with the PlayStation consoles’ versions of the events, even though the story really doesn’t have much substance outside of getting Ghost Rider to his next battle. For the most part, Ghost Rider just bounces from villain, foiling one plan only to learn there’s another in the works, the game touching on some foes familiar to Ghost Rider readers as well as including an appearance from the vampire hunter Blade who just appears for a cutscene and does not interact with the actual gameplay. A group of demons are trying to restore the film’s villain to power and Mephisto needs this potential usurper stopped, but Ghost Rider is having none of it this time, refusing to play along even slightly even after learning that the demons and Mephisto both aim to use his girlfriend as leverage to try and force him to play the role they want him to in the conflict. Positioning itself oddly enough as a sequel to the events of the Ghost Rider film, Johnny Blaze is pulled into Hell by Marvel’s Satan analogue Mephisto to once again become his servant on Earth, the Ghost Rider.
COOL GHOST RIDER GAMES PSP
While the Game Boy Advance Ghost Rider game is the simplest of the three games made to tie-in with Ghost Rider’s 2007 movie, it manages to at least adequately transition the character onto the handheld’s hardware with an experience different from it’s PSP and PS2 counterparts.

Now with a more genuine appreciation for the character, the idea of a Ghost Rider game did intrigue me on some level, especially since he doesn’t get the title spot in most of the video games he appears in. As I grew older my favorite inevitably shifted away to heroes who I had less shallow reason for liking than just their appearance, but I did actually begin to look into Ghost Rider media and learn who the character is. When I was younger, my favorite Marvel superhero was Ghost Rider, the reason being that he had a flaming skull and rode on a motorcycle.
