Sentences with phrase «hitting an enemy does»

The combat is a rather dull button mashing affair with no block button, instead you just have a roll button and hitting an enemy doesn't feel like it has any impact.
There was almost no sound; only when you hit an enemy do you hear a sample - the same one over and over - I decided to turn the sound off and run Winamp while playing.

Not exact matches

In spiritual battle, you don't want to say, «Well, I'm saved and secure forever, so I can lower my defenses, put down my shield, go live any way I want, and let the enemy take his hits at me — because «Hey, I've got my helmet on.»
The Spurs boss was obviously happy about beating their «sworn enemy» but he says that he doesn't care where Arsenal are in the table, he just wants to make Tottenham into a side that can challenge for the title and he feels that his side have hit top form.
Effectiveness was when the CAS could tell us about what the enemy was doing when we couldn't see them, and what they could hit them with.
He never «hit» him... he pushed him and from the weakest possible of positions (and don't forget this is AMAC who is no terror in anyones reckoning) Anyhow, are you telling us you never saw a defenseman push an enemy player away from the net like that?
The enemies vary depending on what level you're on but it never changes the fact that you will be dead in moments if you don't pay attention, time your hits, and move often.
I did NOT invest in blacksmithing or crafting at all, and yet by level 30 - 35 i was able to one - hit nearly any enemy with the exception of boss creatures and dragons, all while remaining completely undetected.
Enemies hit you when they shouldn't, your weapons don't feel like they have any impact, and you never feel quite strong enough to have a chance.
Typically, some enemies fall to one or two weak hits, and other require more than one, so the player learns to recognize the weak enemies of the area and take them out first, to minimize the amount of damage done to Opoona and crew.
Basic combos are pretty boring, but once you've gone into the Badge system, this game's upgrade system, you can expand your basic combo, and get other buffs like hitting weak points harder or doing more damage to enemies with their guard up.
gwyneth paltrow (shallow hal) joe pantoliano (cats & dogs) guy pearce (the time machine) ron perlman (hellboy) michelle pfeiffer (white oleander) lou diamond phillips (the big hit) joaquin phoenix (gladiator) joaquin phoenix (ladder 49) brad pitt (the mexican) brad pitt (oceans 12) brad pitt (troy) natalie portman (where the heart is) natalie portman (garden state) natalie portman (garden state) dennis quaid (far from heaven) dennis quaid (the rookie) aidan quinn (songcatcher) robert redford (the clearing) tara reid (natlamp's van wilder) jean reno (crimson rivers) christina ricci (the man who cried) robert redford (bagger vance) keanu reeves (matrix reloaded) jean reno (crimson rivers) paul reubens (mystery men) ving rhames (bringing out the dead) julia roberts (mona lisa smile) julia roberts (the mexican) the rock (the scorpion king) ray romano (ice age) ray romano (welcome to mooseport) rebecca romijn - stamos (femme fatale) rebecca romijn - stamos (x2) geoffrey rush (mystery men) geoffrey rush (quills) kurt russell (dark blue) kurt russell (miracle) meg ryan (against the ropes) meg ryan (you've got mail) meg ryan (in the cut) winona ryder (lost souls) antonio sabato jr. (the big hit) adam sandler (punch drunk love) susan sarandon (moonlight mile / igby / banger sisters) rob schneider (the animal) kristin scott thomas (random hearts) arnold schwarzenegger (collateral damage) arnold schwarzenegger (end of days) arnold schwarzenegger (the sixth day) arnold schwarzenegger (terminator 3) molly shannon (superstar) elisabeth shue (hollow man) bryan singer (x-men 2) gary sinise (mission to mars / reindeer games) will smith (I, robot) will smith (men in black 2) wesley snipes (blade 2) leelee sobieski (here on earth) leelee sobieski (joy ride) mira sorvino (triumph of love) kevin spacey (pay it forward) kevin spacey (k - pax) david spade (joe dirt) britney spears (crossroads) steven spielberg (catch me if you can) brent spiner (trek insurrection) patrick stewart (trek insurrection) patrick stewart (trek nemesis) patrick stewart (x-men 2) julia stiles (the prince and me) ben stiller (mystery men) sylvester stallone (driven) ben stiller (dodgeball) meryl streep (adaptation) mena suvari (the musketeer) hilary swank (boys don't cry) hilary swank (affair of necklace) charlize theron (monster) charlize theron (north country) uma thurman (les miserables) uma thurman (paycheck) john travolta (basic) john travolta (mad city) john travolta (the punisher) john travolta (swordfish) liv tyler (one night at mccool's) james van der beek (rules of attraction) nia vardalos (connie and carla) patricia velasquez (mummy returns) jon voight (the general) arnold vosloo (mummy returns) mark wahlberg (the big hit) mark wahlberg (planet of apes) christopher walken (the opportunists) paul walker (timeline) denzel washington (he got game) denzel washington (bone collector) denzel washington (training day) denzel washington (john q) denzel washington (out of time) john waters (cecil b. demented) naomi watts (le divorce) naomi watts (the ring) sigourney weaver (tadpole) hugo weaving (matrix reloaded) raquel welch (tortilla soup) forest whitaker (ghost dog) bruce willis (the story of us) bruce willis (whole ten yards) owen wilson (behind enemy lines) peta wilson (league of extraordinary gentlemen) reese witherspoon (pleasantville) reese witherspoon (election) reese witherspoon (sweet home alabama) reese witherspoon (vanity fair) elijah wood (fellowship of the ring) james woods (virgin suicides) renee zellweger (bridget jones's diary) renee zellweger (chicago) catherine zeta - jones (chicago) catherine zeta - jones (traffic) catherine zeta - jones (oceans 12) cast being john malkovich cast / director blair witch 2 cast of cats & dogs cast of dancing at lughnasa cast of daredevil cast of Harry Potter 3 cast of october sky director / cast of ocean's 11 director / cast of shrek director / cast of star trek: insurrection cast of waking ned devine director / cast of X-Men
Melee in this game is void of skill, it is nearly 100 % stat based and you can simply quick swing, power swing or block and the different swings only differences are damage and time taken to execute which in combat comes down to can i take him down with one or two hard hits or do i need to block a bit and beat him down piece by piece there is no dodging to counteract your possibly poor block skill or lack of shield there is no need to understand enemy attacks either they will hurt you if they hit you or if you block it it will hurt alittle or almost as much as normal and with spells and archery its all relevant the spells do elemental damage so the enemy is either resistant, weak, or neutral to a spells type not to mention that every spell has its different element counterpart.
After you're done there you can hit up the game's 4 player co-op escalation mode where players work together to survive infinite waves of enemies while strategically spending points for weapon upgrades, health and more.
Obviously, there's one point at least which leaves you thinking «how the hell did none of those bullets hit him» or «have the enemies ever used a gun before.»
After tragedy hits, Captain America is forced to confront a traitor at SHIELD and he does it, believing that his old - fashioned form of patriotism will be enough to overcome his new enemies.
This attack does multiple hits, so it's very useful for staggering your enemy, attacking hard to reach parts, or dodging attacks if you're stylish enough.
Once you're done, you release the button to hit the enemies.
Elsewhere, the foes in DiscStorm's campaign do brilliantly in training players for the game's multiplayer mode with enemies that can only be hit in behind for example, really forcing folks to work on their rebound game while other opponents mimic human players in an effort to replicate the frenetic conflict which is synonymous with the DiscStorm's competitive multiplayer offering.
When being damaged or hit by an enemy you didn't shrink into a smaller, petite Mario.
That's developer Trendy Entertainment's term for waving your sword at an enemy and chipping their hit points away without feeling any particular sense of impact — that's been a focus during development, and in Dungeon Defenders 2 each swing of your sword or your staff feels like it's doing real damage.
Homing explosives can be turned into waiting bombs, and luring enemies that retaliate when hit into these traps is just one of the many tactics you can abuse to do more damage during your turns.
So that means that enemy worms have a nasty habit of standing around and doing nothing, shooting at walls for no reason, running away for no reason or suddenly becoming the worlds greatest marksman and hitting you from across the map with a shotgun.
- characters are drawn in the main screen in a super-deformed style - features a lot of fan - service - play as Eduard, an innkeeper of an inn who doesn't have a lot of customers - stumble into a cave while looking for crystals and meet a girl who has amnesia - this girl also has six sisters who unlock each other's memories as you come across them - your subordinate at the inn gets the idea to put all of the girls into maid uniforms - the girls transform into battle - appropriate clothing during the battle sequences - strategy / action - RPG hybrid - unlimited movement within a circle around the character's starting point - combo system - when attacking weaker enemies, you knock them back in a fashion that takes out others and builds up a combo - extra turn awarded if you manage to take out 10 or more enemies in one swing - enemies do respawn their weak helpers at a hit point cost to them - right side of the screen shows a time bar so you know which friend or foe will attack nex - male character you play as is more of a support role in battle - he'll provide a lot of your stat buffs - events for each of the maidens that give them a chance to level up and unlock new abilities in each battle - possible 18 quests - each of the girls has their own quirks
- players rack up points by eating humans, and destroying buildings in each five - minute match - roughly 250 Titans to play as from the main game - each of them have various stats, such as speed and stamina - the smaller Titans move quicker, while larger Titans have more stamina - there are two types of humans; citizens and nobles - nobles are shown on the map by a green distress signal, and are worth more points - Titans can smash buildings just by walking into them, but dashing causes buildings to fall faster - destroying buildings gives less points, but also fills up the Rage Gauge for the Rage Attack - player Titans can attack each other - by defeating another player, the defeated player loses half their points - a Levi counter will start counting down on the leading player after some time passes - when it reaches zero, the player with the icon will immediately be killed by Levi - by hitting other player Titans, the counter can be passed on to them instead - the Levi counter doesn't reset upon handing it to another player - special titans like Eren's Titan, the Female Titan, and Armored Titan will appear and attack players randomly - player Titans can be defeated by these special enemies in one hit - special enemy Titans and Levi will disappear after defeating one of the players - Rage Attacks slow down opponents, scramble their controls, give you super armor, and more - at the end of a match, the points are tallied up, and the person with the most points win - playable online and offline on Switch
The idea behind this is that the developers only care that you did hit the dodge button, that you reacted to the enemies attack, and aren't bothered whether your character physically evaded the very top of the incoming spear or axe.
Melee felt solid despite the fact that we didn't get to land it much thanks to the enemies being too smart to run up to us and get hit in the face with the butt of our gun.
Sure, it's great to go for that attack that can be modifed with a bonus hit, but if has an initiative rating of 7 do I really want to risk the enemy going for a faster strike early in the round that could potentially decimate my remaining troops before I even get a chance to swing a blade?
What really drives this point home is the main story mode, which plays out like a «One Piece Battles Greatest Hits» montage instead of introducing new enemies or allies that don't require years of background knowledge of the series.
- Ophilia and Cyrus have been announced as the last two playable characters - Cyrus is a scholar working at the royal university who is an incredibly curious and knowledgeable person - Cyrus» Path Action is «Explore» which lets him find out hidden details and information about other characters - during combat, Cyrus can reveal the weaknesses of enemies and exploit them using fire, ice and lightning magic - Ophilia is a priestess and her Path Action is Lead, which allows her to guide characters to certain places by having them follow - in combat, she's a classic white mage - type who can heal allies, buff their stats and use light magic to attack the enemy - Ophilia can also call upon the character she's guiding to aid her in battle - character's special abilities are called Talents - Olberic can take hits in place of other characters in battle - Primrose, like Ophilia, can call upon the character she has charmed and have them aid her in battle - Tressa can sometimes find money simply by walking around the overworld - Alfyn can mix items to damage enemies or heal allies - Therion can unlock treasure chests - H'aanit can capture beasts during combat - your active battle party can consist of four characters, but you can swap them out with the other four characters at any time - even after you've met up with the other playable characters, you can still pursue each character's individual story - you do this by making them the «main» character of your current party
Not only does failing to do so this ruin any sense of power and weight your attacks are supposed to have, but there also appears to be no discernible pattern behind when enemies will be staggered or when they'll shrug your blows off, creating an awkward rhythm to combat and making it hard to get a good combo going as you'll find yourself either constantly getting hit or blocking / dodging.
Ripping through a crowd of enemies and being given the choice to execute each of them in this manner is a beautiful thing, because managing to do so comes with the knowledge that you were never hit, that you were perfect in your offense and defense.
You have to be close enough to an enemy to hit it, and where you stand will also affect how much damage you do and how accurate you're going to be.»
Still, the constant enemy killing does begin to grow tiresome by time you hit the five - hour mark, but then the game ends!
The core gameplay of Light Fall has little to do with enemies — in fact, very seldom do you come across enemies, and they're all dealt with in one hit, or can be dodged entirely.
Speaking of which it is a little odd to that enemies don't really react to being set on fire, which can be rather baffling when your desperately trying to burn them alive only to have them hit you in the face with a hammer, yet from gameplay terms it does make sense; if setting them ablaze made them freak out then magic would be just a tad overpowered.
Remember to use the hit - markers that flash up to track an enemy whilst doing this.
Adjustments - Timing shortened from being downed to rising, rising into a movement, mid-air quick recovery, jumping, dashing, moving (on ground or midair), attacking, or guarding - Awakening: Fixed bug where attacks at very close range came from unguardable angles; these can now be guarded - Dash Combo: Fixed bug where Tag Combos weren't counted for achievement purposes unless landed on a foe who was incapacitated by a Tag Combo - Brynhildr (Awakened): Boosted movement speed, turning radius, and max movement time when targeting foes with melee attacks as long as the Awakening gauge isn't empty - Ares (Summon Special Move 1): Removed hitbox between Ares and spear that appeared right after throwing a spear - Odin (melee mode, neutral melee attack): Boosted time between when Odin begins swinging his blade and when hitbox appears - Odin (melee mode, side melee attack): Boosted time between when Odin begins swinging his blade and when hitbox appears - Grim Reaper (Special Move 2): Boosted movement speed, turning radius, and max movement time for zombies when targeting foes as long as the Awakening gauge isn't empty - Grim Reaper (Down + Special Move 2): Fixed bug where dog zombies occasionally didn't face the correct direction while moving - Grim Reaper (Awakened, Character Ability Power) Added fire effect to characters who take damage after being hit by a zombie ball when Grim Reaper is in fire zombie ball mode - Ra (bomb mode, Special Move 1): Bombs can now be destroyed by enemy attack - Ra (ranged / bomb mode, Special Move 1): Changed reload when out of ammo to constant reload - Slayer (Melee Attack, Down + Melee Attack branch): Reduced freeze time upon landing on the ground - Slayer (upper Melee Attack): Reduced movement speed when pursuing foes - Slayer: Reduced turning radius when moving to attack - Loki (Special Move 1): Fixed bug so Grim Reaper's Special Move 1 zombies, Ra's Special Move 1 bombs, etc. are now drawn in - Loki (Awakened): Boosted movement speed, turning radius, and max movement time when targeting foes with melee attacks as long as the Awakening gauge isn't empty - Loki (Special Move 2): Fixed move so that Loki isn't motionless while charging.
Basically its the same boost, but when you use it and hit enemy's you will continue to boost until you do not hit anything.
Enemies will go from hitting and doing 30 or 40 damage to doing between 80 and 100 damage, same battle level, same eEnemies will go from hitting and doing 30 or 40 damage to doing between 80 and 100 damage, same battle level, same enemiesenemies.
From what I've noticed, the two rows don't necessarily dictate enmity or priority for the enemy's attacks, just rather attack ranges (so an enemy with only a short range attack wouldn't hit the back row and so forth).
Most hack and slash games though totally miss the mark, games such as Ninja Blade and Afro Samurai, these games had so much potential but didn't hit the mark when it comes to fluid game play and balanced enemies etc..
In fact, when it does amp up the challenge it could feel a bit unfair — there's one scene later on in the game where you have no cover and have to take on an onslaught of enemies, which could be a bit hit - and - miss given the often awkward shooting mechanics.
To do so, Shovel Knight has three abilities, a standard jump, a shovel attack that can hit foes or dig up dirt blocks or piles, and finally a pogo - like attack that can hit enemies from above and cause Shovel Knight to bounce.
I remember spending hours kicking asses and taking names back upon the game's release and, even though the controls admittedly feel clunky when compared to modern titles, the core gameplay that made Devil May Cry such a standout hit is still very much an addictive romp through crowds of enemies... Even if it did take me a while to figure out how to shoot when on the ground, which necessitates holding a trigger button to aim unlike when you're airborne and unloading clips into the faces of possessed marionettes.
While you take turns between your attacks and the enemy's attacks, when it is your turn you don't just tap on a spell or weapon to attack but you also have a meter bar at the top, generally with a section in red which is your critical hit section.
One of the new game elements that Vector TD has is that the waves of enemies don't come until you are ready and hit a button to send them.
You will also be fighting multiple enemies at one time, making for some really hectic fights where you are setting traps, dodging enemies, and making sure you don't get hit by trains running through the levels or any other built in traps.
The unit has an attack that never misses, can strike multiple enemies, and inflicts shockingly high damage on anything that it hits as long as you don't roll a 1 on a six - sided dice.
Keep in mind that Enemies take off twice as much damage per hit and Green Herbs heal only a fraction of what they do in Normal mode.
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