MK vs DC has the usual Arcade Mode that pits your chosen fighter against a legion of foes on your way up a pillar to the ultimate
evil end boss.
Not exact matches
Developed by Lexicon Entertainment in collaboration with CyberPlanet Interactive, Ocean Commander follows the basic premise: players take control of an amazing prototype ship and have to go it alone against an
evil empire threatening to take over the world and as usual a
boss at the
end of the stage must be defeated to progress.
Resident
Evil 4 also bucks the depressing trend of games that
end with awful
boss fights — I dare say that the final
boss here is quite possibly the best of the bunch.
Each chapter
ends with a
boss fight with one of the
evil musicians.
The segment where you play as Mia on the boat is fine and could've helped
end the game on a high note of sorts, but the climax feels extremely rushed with a final
boss that's painfully lackluster, looking just like the lame slug monsters we got from Resident
Evil 5.
It's not like turning pages in a book after
boss battles, it's not switching between good and
evil dialog responses from NPCs based on which characters the user entered combat with, and it's not offering alternate
endings based on player choices made moments before the
end.
You play as Moth, whose mission is to uncover the secrets and conspiracies that lie deep within a creepy castle named The City of Light.A straight forward story line: fight through a castle full on enemies, finding keys to open doors, getting completely lost, finding various items to help you explore deeper into the castle, and finally meeting the ultimate
evil, final
boss as the
end.
But now, story-wise, the reborn realm is under a new threat from the
evil Garlean Empire, and it's up to the players to save the day, via fetch quests, F.A.T.E.s, and dungeon crawls that
end with spectacular
boss battles, as any Final Fantasy - branded game should.
Everybody needs an
Evil Plan that gets them the hell out of the rat race, away from lousy
bosses, away from boring, dead -
end jobs they hate.