Tekken 6

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starstarstarstarstar  3.3
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Format:PlayStation 3
Manufacturer:ATARI
Category:Sale
Genre:Fighting
SMS Code:PS3TE00
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Tekken 6

While the Tekken series is known for its extremely impressive and intensely action-packed cinematic cutscenes, this one for Tekken 6 is surprisingly deliberate in its pacing, starting off with a long shot of a dusty old cityscape. Eventually a mysterious figure, whose face is concealed by a wide-brimmed hat, slowly appears, walking calmly. Cut to Jin Kazama getting sent careening through a wall...in walks Lili, looking smug. Jin struggles back to his feet and the previously described sequence with their fight plays. Hwoarang leaps off of his bike, which explodes...but during this bizarre entrance, Jin unleashes his hidden power, switching to his intimidating devil form. Hwoarang isn't fazed, though, and proceeds to kick some of the stuffing out of Devil Jin. So Devil Jin does what any winged fiend would do in this situation. He flies up, gathers a whole bunch of energy, and fires a massive beam of light towards a nearby tower, which cuts in half and collapses on his two opponents.

  • Gorgeous Graphics: The advanced high-definition graphics and 3D animation technologies create the most impressive HD visuals in Tekken history.
  • The Largest Character Roster Ever: Master 40 unique fighters representing the world's top martial arts styles! The character line-up includes 34 beloved characters, such as Jin, Heihachi and Kazuya, as well as 6 brand new characters with unique fighting styles and combo systems!
  • Compete and Battle Globally: Prove your supremacy against players from around the world with Online VS Mode!
  • Endless Possibilities to Customise: Create new characters and customise them with every imaginable detail. Customise their hairstyles, apparel, fashion accessories, tattoos, etc. Then take your own ultimate fighters online!
  • Dynamic, Interactive, Destructible Environments: Punch your enemies through concrete walls or kick them through floors to open a whole new battleground. The stages go through dynamic changes ranging from a sudden attack helicopter crash to vehicle explosions!

Character roster:

- Anna Williams, Armor King, Alisa Bosconovich, Asuka Kazama, Baek Doo San, Bob, Bruce Irvin and Bryan Fury

- Christie Monteiro, Devil Jin, Dragunov, Eddy Gordo, Feng Wei, Ganryu, Heihachi Mishima and Hwoarang

- Jack-5, Jin Kazama, Julia Chang, Kazuya Mishima, King, Kuma, Lars Alexandersson and Marshall Law

- Lili, Lee Chaolan, Lei Wulong, Leo, Marduk, Miguel Caballero Rojo, Mokujin and Nina Williams

- Panda, Paul Phoenix, Ravan, Roger, Jr, Steve Fox, Wang Jinrey, Ling Xiaoyu, Yoshimitsu and Zafina

Eurogamer Review

7/10

If you're looking for the current beat-'em-up champion here in the West, look no further than Street Fighter IV. Upon finally reaching G1 earlier this year, after many hours in championship mode, a glance at the leaderboards revealed I was still ranked below 6000 more dedicated players. Eek.

But in Japanese arcades the popularity contest has gone a very different way. The latest statistics from Arcadia Magazine suggest that Tekken 6: Bloodline Rebellion has the largest audience, followed by BlazBlue, Melty Blood, Guilty Gear, and then Street Fighter IV. When you consider Tekken 6 has been out in Japan since 2007, the continued devotion is even more impressive.

The question is, does the long overdue console port of Tekken 6 have what it takes to wow the West?

Graphically, Tekken 6 shows a bit of age but is still attractive. All the characters have been well realised, with a standard of detail comparable to SoulCalibur IV, if not quite beyond Virtua Fighter 5. Animation is also top notch, with each combatant faithfully representing their chosen fighting style - albeit with inhuman strength and reduced gravity. Namco has also furnished Tekken 6 with an optional motion blur, which communicates a greater sense of momentum.

Underneath the new textures and added polygons, all your old favourites like Jin, Hwoarang, Nina and Paul have made it into the game along with six new fighters, giving Tekken 6 a 40-strong roster and a new variety benchmark. The new bloods are three new guys and three new girls, with the larger than life Bob my pick of the litter. His flamboyant flips and pirouettes are at odds with his excessive girth, and I can't help smiling at names like "rolling kebab" and "supersize missile".

For those players eager to make the jump from Tekken 5 to Tekken 6, be warned that Namco has made significant changes to a handful of characters. Most noticeable is Yoshimitsu and his new double sword style. One of Yoshimitsu's unique strengths throughout the series has been his crazy stances and unblockable sword attacks, and although he retains many of his classic moves, the ways in which they combo together have been drastically reworked. It's not just Yoshimitsu though - Marshall Law has also received a few tweaks. The JKD Chef is a few moves up from his Tekken 5 outing and looks more Game of Death than ever in his black and yellow tracksuit.

Despite these changes there is much about Tekken 6 which feels familiar, and if you're a Hwoarang, Bryan or Eddy player, you'll find the old juggle combos still work as well as they used to do. Indeed, the new fighting system isn't much of an evolution from Tekken 5. The emphasis is still on juggle combos where both players fish for a launcher whilst playing a mental war of low, high, throw and counter.

But Tekken 6 also adds the new Bound system, allowing players to bounce their opponent off the ground during a juggle combo for an even more viscous assault. The airtime this creates is the longest in Tekken history, with a high-level "bouncy castle" combo doing slightly over a third of full damage on average. However, the damage scaling usually kicks in before things get too silly.

The other new mechanic is Rage. This is activated during your last slither of health and increases your damage output. Usually this doesn't change the outcome of a match, but there have been instances where I've suffered a galling defeat at the hands of a Rage-fuelled Bound combo - in some cases going from half health to nothing. Clearly it's designed to give people one last shot at victory, but the problem with it is that the increase in damage is so great that you probably won't get the same opportunity should you find yourself on the receiving end. It doesn't break the game, but the game would arguably have been better without it.

Namco has at least thrown in a wide selection of modes, including arcade, versus, team battle, time attack, survival, ghost battle and practice. The practice mode is pretty basic and doesn't even include a way to record attack patterns or turn on the Rage state, but otherwise it's reasonably functional. Arcade mode is exactly that and ends with a showdown against the Egyptian ice-god Azazel - or at least that's what he/she/it looks like. As you'd expect, Azazel is the typical Tekken cheese-fest, with cheap tricks ranging from laser beams to summoning stalagmites from the ground. But in comparison to bonus boss Nancy-MI847J, Azazel is pretty tame.

"Tame" is also a good way to describe the new Scenario Campaign. This new mode kicks off with a lengthy cinematic that outlines the King of Iron Fist tournament's canon story. You know the drill: Heihachi throws Kazuya off a cliff, Kazuya returns the favour and then Heihachi throws Kazuya into a volcano and then shoots Jin, etc. Players are introduced to Alisa and Lars, the latter of whom has lost his memory, before the campaign begins proper. The campaign gameplay is best described as 3D Streets of Rage where you beat up waves of generic enemies before facing an end-of-level boss. It's all very basic, but Namco has done its best to inject the full fighting system, and although fiddly on the 360 pad, it's just about bearable.

Aside from the main story the campaign also houses the arena mode. This is similar to the standard arcade mode but can only be played through with characters you've unlocked in the campaign. The purpose of the Arena is to view each character's ending cinematic, and many of these are worth watching with Bob's a particular highlight. "Only 150 pounds... Noooooooooo!"

Playing the campaign will also unlock clothing and accessories for your character. By heading into the customisation menu you can completely change a fighter's threads and hairstyle, and although the options aren't that vast, there is scope to dress Marduk as an American footballer and Armour King in a "full" leopard costume. Similar to SoulCalibur IV, some of these accessories also confer special effects in the campaign, ranging from basic attack increases to health regeneration and element damage.

The most interesting customisation feature is the new Item Moves. By equipping Bryan with a mini-gun or Armour King with a studded bat, both characters can use their weapon with a specific command. Generally these moves do little damage, but there's something satisfying about finishing an online opponent with Law's legendary nunchaku.

With that said, Tekken 6 disappoints in the online department. It's a shame, because all the right features are in place including ranked and player matches, a solid matchmaking system, continental learderboards and ghost data swapping. But in my experience on Xbox Live the netcode is often inadequate, with noticeable lag - even during a solid green connection. It's not as bad as The King of Fighters XII, but it's definitely not as stable as Street Fighter IV or the excellent BlazBlue. As always, the input lag makes cheap tactics like spamming Kazuya's spin-kicks harder to avoid, and for this reason there also seems to be an increasing abundance of online capoeira. Just remember to block low early.

As a package, Tekken 6 is far from perfect but it's still a solid fighter and superior to the likes of KOFXII for head-to-head couch play. The new modes and features do little to change the classic formula, but the sixth King of Iron Fist Tournament is nonetheless deep, balanced and rewarding to those who invest the time. It's also very accessible to those who just want to dabble with an intuitive fighter and not spend hours in the practice mode. Had Namco spent a bit less time on the forgettable Scenario Campaign and more on sorting out the netcode, however, this could have gone higher. A miracle patch would be very helpful.

Comments

joe the man avatar

2009-12-12 18:39:18 - joe the man wrote:

starstarstarstarstar   "Seriously."


I really want this on PS3, but I'm not paying 50% more than the Xbox 360 version.

Sort it out please ST.


trimbal avatar

2009-11-27 18:15:06 - trimbal wrote:

starstarstarstarstar   "The Game Is Alright Styl"


Got Platinum Trophies Like A Week Ago, it was a rubbish game @ 1st i was dissapointed with it and wanted my money back lool, but after 2/3weeks i liked it and completed it now. Online Is Decent, They should of put more thought to it like Street Fighter IV did with their online battles and trophies.

The Main Bad Points I Hated Was:

In Practice Mode You Can't Do Command Select Like In Tekken 5 Unless You Pause Game And Acess and Heihachi Mishima was my best character untill they changed his moves and most off the other characters moves too, My Main Character is now Bob.

Add me and face me online talibantrim.


genx avatar

2009-11-08 18:50:44 - genx wrote:

  "Rubbish game"


really really bad game:

very very very Bad graphics, scenario mode is for kids and classic gameplay with fine animation but not next-gen quality..

poor quality game i wouldn't buy it for cheaper price..... just avoid at all cost.........BAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD


rizzy88 avatar

2009-11-07 21:17:48 - rizzy88 wrote:

  "Strike??"


Still Not Received My Game.. Well Pee'd Off.. :(


max101 avatar

2009-11-03 01:40:13 - max101 wrote:

  "best game ever & best servic"


got the game on the 27/10/09 arrived 2 days early......the game is fantastic been looking forward to this tekken the most as its the first installment on the next gen consoles....game plays very smoothly and graphics are fab.....online mode isnt perfect but i have gotten some gr8 battles.....the story is very interesting and the character roster is unbelievable....it us best to install the game once you get it as load times on blu ray are very slow..


chornolio avatar

2009-11-02 21:31:36 - chornolio wrote:


Yes.There is russian language.Only subs(text) voice in english/japan.


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