

This item is being licensed or sublicensed to you by Sony Computer Entertainment America and is subject to the Network Terms of Service and User Agreement, this item’s use restrictions and other applicable terms located at If you do not wish to accept all these terms, do not download this item. This version does not support PlayStation® peripherals (controller, memory card, multitap, etc.), therefore functionalities such as multiplayer, versus, and co-op modes are not available. Consequently, there may be times where the title plays differently from the PlayStation® disc version, or where some features may not function properly. Then, download the game from your 'Download List' in the PlayStation®Store onto your PS3™ system.This title has been converted from the original PlayStation® disc to the PSP® and the PS3™ systems. Highlight the game on the PS3™ XMB™, press the Δ button and select Copy.PC Store Customers:Log into your PSN account that you originally used to purchased the game. Connect your PSP® system to your PS3™ system with a USB cable and switch your PSP® system to USB Mode. You must have at least 101 MB free on your Memory Stick Duo™. The game was followed by 1999's Gex 3: Deep Cover Gecko, which released on the PlayStation, Nintendo 64, and Game Boy Color.Purchase this PS one® Classic and play it on your PS3™, PS Vita, and PSP® (PlayStation®Portable) systems!After a few years in solitude, Gex is called out of his home to go up against his nemesis, Rez, who is out to control the world yet again.Download this PS one® Classic today!Transferring to a PSP® system from your PS3™ system:You must be signed into the PSN account that originally purchased the game. Critics' main concerns centered on the game's camera, graphics, low-polygon enemies, and simplicity.

The Nintendo 64 release, due to hardware limitations, features six fewer levels than its PlayStation counterpart, but the release also includes one exclusive level, "Gecques Cousteau".Ĭritical reception of Gex: Enter the Gecko was mostly positive. Hundreds of voice-overs were recorded for the character Gex, but hardware constraints forced the Nintendo 64 version of the game to include only around one hundred samples. The Gex model was rebuilt with this perspective in mind, and much of the game's humor was inspired by Fox's animated television series The Simpsons, on which script writer Rob Cohen had previously worked as a writer. After creating the original Gex, which released for the 3DO Interactive Multiplayer, PC, Sega Saturn, and PlayStation in 1995, developer Crystal Dynamics sought a sequel in the form of a 3D platform video game in the style of Super Mario 64.
