We all have fond memories of PaRappa the Rapper when he first arrived on PlayStation 1 a decade ago. Now, our beloved rapping puppy is back on the PSP. However, nostalgia doesn't make a good game.
It’s rather humorous, if not ironic, that as much as Sony complained about PSP users running emulators on unlocked handhelds, a PSP emulator was found within one of their own PS4 re-releases. The ...
It doesn’t seem like ten years have passed and gone since the rhythm rapping game changed the way we looked at flat-paper, rapping dogs. Yet, time has waited for no one and Sony is taking this aging ...
While the PSP version of PaRappa the Rapper is pretty much the same game you know and love from the PS1 era (read: quick and easy port). Sony did add a few features to the game, which take advantage ...
The PSP is one of my favorite systems, mostly because it's the only portable that lets me listen to "This American Life" from my CD rips in between sessions of The Warriors. The DS can do a lot of ...
It's hard to knock a plucky little puppy like Parappa the Rapper, but disappointment set in with this first PSP entry in the franchise almost immediately. It's not that this is necessarily a bad port ...
Do you want to share your PSP-related fan art? Send us an e-mail. A new piece of fan art will be shared every Friday. Let illjules know what you think of this PaRappa fan art in the comments or go to ...
Sony has confirmed to Eurogamer this afternoon that PaRappa The Rapper will be coming to European PSPs. It will be available alongside the American version in July. Handheld PaRappa will bring back ...
Before the music/rhythm genre blew up Nanaon-Sha created Parappa the Rapper. It had a fresh look with flat paper-like characters in a 3D world and at the time the gameplay was revolutionary. You play ...
A long time ago on the system that took the world [img]parappa_psp_1[/img]by storm, the Playstation, a young dog learned how to rap and become cool with his many friends. PaRappa was the dog's name ...
I've been a tech journalist for almost 25 years and started Pocket-lint in 2003. Over the years I've questioned or interviewed leading tech industry figures from Steve Jobs, Steve Ballmer, Mark ...