Sentences with phrase «while dynasty warriors»

With these figures, Monster Hunter World sold 638,881 copies in Japan February alone, counting both digital and retail markets, while Dynasty Warriors 9 sold 188,237 copies.
While Dynasty Warriors» stories usually have some level of gravitas and drama, due to them being retellings of Chinese history, Dynasty Warriors 9 ruins that with a terrible script and horrendous voice acting.
While Dynasty Warriors focuses on The Romance of the Three Kingdoms tale from ancient China, Samurai Warriors 4 details the historic unification of Japan.
Dynasty Warriors 7 seemed a little brighter and had more open landscapes, while Dynasty Warriors 8 seems to have more detail on smaller - scale areas.
While Dynasty Warriors 8 Empires offers a decent level of enjoyment through a player orientated experience that can be customised to suit most tastes, Empires suffers from a terrible tutorial that fails to convey how to make the most of the experience.
While the Dynasty Warriors franchise hasn't been known as the best looking games to grace a console, there have been some entries in the past that have really looked quite amazing.
While Dynasty Warriors» stories usually have some level of gravitas and drama, due to them being retellings of Chinese history, Dynasty Warriors 9 ruins that with a terrible script and horrendous voice acting.
$ 19.99) will be on sale for $ 11.99, while Dynasty Warriors 7 (reg.

Not exact matches

In Short: Dynasty Warriors finally gets the overhaul it's long been waiting for... and while it addresses a few old problems it creates just as many new ones.
For anyone who's not played a Dynasty Warriors game, it involves fighting hundreds of enemies to protect key areas and defend where you can, while levelling up your characters.
However, while these refinements show real promise of evolving Dynasty Warriors» mindless mechanics, they're sadly outshined by too - long stretches of button - spamming action.
Dynasty Warriors 8: Empires then is largely more of the same that we've seen from the franchise in the last ten years and while it may be past its sell by date in a number of ways, a thick layer of strategy and the evergreen engagement of its combat ensure a substantial allure all the same.
Raids and invasions on opposing provinces encompass the standard Dynasty Warriors hack and slash gameplay, while quests provide smaller, more goal directed objectives to accomplish that provide welcome respite from the extended button - mashing grind of the game's much larger battles.
While the turn - based strategic elements of Fire Emblem may seem at odds with the hack - and - slash nature found in the Dynasty Warriors series, the game does a splendid job in incorporating elements of both and doing them justice.
Fans of the Dynasty Warriors will be able to experience familiar combat with a fresh new setting, while fans of The Legend of Zelda series will experience familiar characters and items in an entirely new combat setting.
Nintendo partners up with Omega Force and Team Ninja to deliver the Zelda take on musou, aka Dynasty Warriors, where you slash your way through hundreds and thousands of enemies on the battlefield, while also commanding your army.
According to the Koei Tecmo Vice President, the team looks for established IPs in order to integrate their Dynasty Warriors - style combat while raking money in hand over fist as fans scramble to the new game because of their love of the lore from the mix.
Suzuki is lead producer on the Dynasty Warriors games these days, while Ogasawara has shifted gears to lead up Toukiden, the new Omega Force franchise first detailed to the public last week.
We stare and yawn at Dynasty Warriors Next, and while we won't go so far as to say Ridge Racer is a creatively bankrupt franchise, the game has lived off of nostalgia alone for far too long.
While the idea sounds good in theory, has it been successfully integrated with the traditional Dynasty Warriors formula?
While these mechanics are unique, some of the problems from the Dynasty Warriors games still manage to find their way in, with the worst offender being repetition.
Nintendo is going cross-over crazy with their wii U. Where wii gave us the unexpected Sonic & Mario at the olympics, while Snake and Sonic appeared in Smash bros Brawl — the Wii U has Megaman and Sonic returning for smash, Fire emblem x SMT, Yoshi and Zelda levels in Sonic and a Zelda / Dynasty warriors mash - up.
While long - time fans wait patiently for more news on the latest and greatest Dynasty Warriors sequel, those who hold one or more of KOEI TECMO's developments close in their hearts will soon have a version of the game to call their own.
I spotted ya playing this the other day while I continue to barnstorm through all things Dynasty Warriors 8 XL & considered asking about it through PSN, but I decided to await the review which - hey!
The open world of Dynasty Warriors 9 has some performance issues while still providing a decent experience.
It's a mix between the Dynasty Warriors game play style and the One Piece world, and while there is nothing wrong with Dynasty warrior style - games which happen to be brushed up pretty nicely having done a really good job with each level's design in the game with the ambushes and the enemies that appear in front of you.
While spin - off series Dynasty Warriors: Empires has something vaguely similar, there's nothing quite like Adventure Mode in the core Omega Force games.
The much - anticipated Dynasty Warriors title will arrive in early 2018 for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC, while in Japan it'll be a PS4 exclusive.
While not out for another month in the West, Hyrule Warriors — the lovechild of The Legend of Zelda and Dynasty Warriors — was released in Japan this past Thursday.
The combat is reminiscent of a Dynasty Warriors game in that you hack and slash through crowds of monsters while unleashing the odd special move although there's a more action - oriented system in play here as you must guard and dodge with precision if you want to survive the tougher intimate one - on - one boss battles.
Dynasty Warriors has been utilizing RPG elements for a while but this is a first for me: An entry (or spin - off, whatever) where the RPG and strategy aspects actually stand toe - to - toe with the action.
I haven't played a really good Dynasty Warriors game in a while.
While the release date and details for the launch of Dynasty Warriors 7's DLC was already confirmed, the European Community Manager for Tecmo - Koei Europe decided that a little more fanfare and excitement was needed for the announcement.
While we have been keeping you up - to - date with Dynasty Warriors 8 news, there is still more to come for its predecessor!
While the story starts with the Yellow Turban Rebellion as always, Dynasty Warriors 7 takes the story further than ever before, with Jin's story telling of their unification of the land after the rest of the timeline, and also adding a fresh batch of characters to play with.
Essentially, while the scores of combatants won't cause you much harm, the main challenge is much the same as it has been since the release of Dynasty Warriors 2 some 17 years ago.
While the game reminds me of Dynasty Warriors in its gameplay, it feels a lot more shallow — stages are mostly linear paths, and there are no strategic elements to the game — simply run forward, defeat enemies, repeat.
While they do a decent job of setting the stage for when and where things are happening (which is an improvement over previous Dynasty Warriors titles), there are times where the story seems to suffer from a little hand - waving.
While not out for another month in the West, Hyrule Warriors — the lovechild of The Legend of Zelda and Dynasty Warriors — was released in Japan this past Thursday.
When Dynasty Warriors 6 made a lot of changes to the series, mostly for the worse in my eyes, Tecmo - Koei did the right thing — they returned to the formula from the earlier games and built upon it with better graphics, new gameplay elements and the best re-telling of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms so far — while retaining all that made Dynasty Warriors a series that I enjoy.
While the plot, setting, and characters may all be of Zelda lineage, make no mistake, when it comes to gameplay, this is a Dynasty Warriors game through and through.
The much - anticipated Dynasty Warriors title will arrive in early 2018 for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC, while in Japan it'll be a PS4 exclusive.
There's a ton of things that while old, would still be great to have like the Atelier series, Folklore, Dynasty / Samurai Warriors....
If you're not familiar with Dynasty Warriors, it has the player take to an open battlefield to complete various objectives like capturing strategic points and keeping AI counterparts alive, all while running around obliterating hordes of extremely stupid enemies.
For those unfamiliar with the term, a Musou styled game is similar to the likes of Dynasty Warriors, and has the player ploughing through hundreds of soldiers to capture command points throughout the map while occasionally facing off against a similarly overpowered enemy hero or an enormous boss monster while the foot - soldiers watch in equal parts awe and horror and simply try and not get in the way of your whirlwind of directionless murder.
While not musou games, that trilogy led me to a series by the same developers known as Dynasty Warriors.
While there have been many Dynasty Warriors games to date, Dynasty Warriors 8: Empires is the first one to come to a portable system, the PlayStation Vita.
While it's not the new Zelda game we were necessarily hoping for, I'm hoping it will be as fun an addition to the Dynasty Warriors franchise as the Dynasty Warriors Gundam games were.
Users can play as their favorite Dynasty Warriors hero and face off against other legends while mastering a huge array of weapon - based attacks and fighting moves.
The cover art features Zhao Yun and Yukimura Sanada — the poster boys of the Dynasty Warriors and Samurai Warriors series — while the story mode's «main characters» are conspicuously absent, even from the background crowd.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z