![]() ![]() ![]() In Attack Mode, the player is initially restricted to playing Eren Jaeger, Mikasa Ackermann, Armin Arlelt, and Levi in order to follow the story from the anime. All characters are unlocked by the end of Chapter 3. In other words, the game is decent, but some extra variety in gameplay and some time spent massaging out some technical issues would've made Attack on Titan a more justifiable game to invest in. Attack on Titan has a total of ten playable characters that are gradually unlocked as the player progresses through Attack Mode. While the graphics are decent - if the naked human-looking Titans don't creep you out - the game does suffer from some technical glitches (such as losing half a character's body in other objects) and from slowdowns in frame rate depending on what's happening on-screen or how close you get to the giant Titans. After a couple of hours, you might not be so keen playing, unless you want to go online and play some co-op with your buddies in Expedition mode (actually, you can get around quicker alone, so not everyone likes the multiplayer mode). Boss characters also aren't very challenging. While not all missions are the same (for example, you'll be tasked with escorting soldiers through a forest on horseback and protecting a structure on the map), some objectives are more fun than others, but they're not very unique or memorable. The problem is that repetition between missions tends to wear down the appeal of the game. It's fun, fast, and gratifying to swing over the tops of forests, towns, and other areas to look for giant Titans to hop onto before you begin to take them down one by one. In other words, the game makers nailed the look and feel. ![]() ![]() Also, while the game borrows elements from the Dynasty Warriors catalog, Attack on Titan doesn't feel like the franchise was shoehorned into an existing gameplay mechanic. The developers cleverly and successfully infused the anime and manga series' look, environments, and story. If you're a fan of the TV series, you'll no doubt appreciate the amount of detail put into this Koei Tecmo adventure. In my opinion, they should have waited the third season before releasing AoT 2, so more content would be available.Fans of the anime and TV show will appreciate the detail of this game, but technical issues and repetitive play make it an average adventure at best. Of course that get a good weapon shouldn't be easy task on a game, but spend +20 hours replaying missions and farming materials on the hardest difficult setting only to get a decent sword is a little too much, there are better ways to make it challenging without being tedious (and it's even worse if you're a completionist/trophy hunter).Īnyway, this game is for the anime/manga fans, and it's fun if you just want to beat the story mode and move on. Plus, get the best weapons and skills on this game take hours of unnecessary farming. Putting a player-created character on this game feels like reading a "reader insert" fan fic at some parts (like when leveling up friendship status with characters). While there have been stories of man-eating giants and titans for millennia, never has the concept. The excuse to repeat the first season here is that you can now create your own soldier and see the game through his/her perspective, but everything is pretty much the same. The hook for what makes fans want to watch 'Attack on Titan' has always been its horrific roots. AoT 2 includes the first and second season from the anime, the problem is that the second season is very short compared to the first, and the first season was already covered by AoT 1, so if you played the first game, things on AoT 2 may only get interesting after half of the story mode. As someone who played the first AoT for +50 hours, I must say this one doesn't feel like a brand new game. ![]()
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