Friday, 26 April 2013
Bloody Roar 2 Game Free Download For PC
Bloody Roar 2 Game Free Download For PC
Bloody Roar 2 is a
marginal improvement that still suffers from second-best status due to
the exclusion of integral gameplay elements that should never have been
messed with.
Bloody Roar first appeared on the fighting-game map a little more than a
year ago, it was a refreshing surprise by a development team not known
for fighters. Eighting/Raizing, whose previous effort was the critically
acclaimed shooter Soukyugurentai, practically came out of nowhere with
this savvy blend of anthropomorphic/lycanthropic combatants. The fast,
furious fighting found in the game made playing other fighters of the
time (Dead or Alive, Street Fighter EX) seem tedious and sluggish by
comparison.
Bloody Roar 2, no one can deny the wealth of features available at the
outset: arcade mode, story mode, training, survival, time attack, etc.
It's all in here. There's also the extra customs menu, where you can
select things like the big-head modes and other stuff also found in the
first game. While there isn't anything as luxurious as a Tekken Force
mode or an RPG mode, most gamers usually don't fret over such details,
and won't miss them here either. Graphically, the game is as gorgeous as
the first installment - in fact, it looks almost exactly the same, with
beautiful light-sourcing, speedy 60fps action, and all sorts of special
effects when switching into beast mode.
Gratuitous character swapping aside, little has changed from the first
game, prompting the question, "why bother?" Why bother indeed when
Bloody Roar 2 actually takes a step back and removes the ease of
executing the sidestep! For reasons unfathomable, somebody actually went
ahead and removed the perfectly functional sidestep, which was the main
reason the American version of BR1 was a fairly balanced fighter. While
there is an option in the custom mode that activates the sidestep
(performed by pressing right after executing a block), it's hardly
intuitive and only serves to give the computer an additional edge while
you struggle with the controls. Without this function, Bloody Roar 2
reverts to the all-out frontal assault that the import version of the
first game was. While the new characters are much better than the ones
they replaced, and the number of available moves per character has
increased, the incentive to keep on playing wanes severely after a few
rounds. The mode most gamers will enjoy playing is the story mode, which
gives you a good deal of background material on each fighter.
In its defense, the voice-overs and sound effects are very well done,
while the overall gameplay is responsive and fast paced, making fighters
like Dead or Alive seem slow and ponderous. Nevertheless, you'd be
foolish to call BR2 a Tekken-killer. It's really disappointing, because
it really could have been. Unfortunately, while surprise developer
Eighting/Raizing could have used Bloody Roar 1 as a blueprint for even
greater things with the sequel, it appears as if the team dropped the
ball.
The bottom line is, if you never picked up the first game, Bloody Roar 2
is still a good game, with a much better cast than the first one.
However, in contrast to the original American version of BR1, Bloody
Roar 2 is a marginal improvement that still suffers from second-best
status due to the exclusion of integral gameplay elements that should
never have been messed with. The game is a major disappointment for such
a promising series....