Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce

Buy Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce for only £29.85 at ShopTo.Net
Average Rating:
average of 0 ratings
starstarstarstarstar  0.0
[be 1st to add a rating!]
Format:Xbox360
Manufacturer:KOEI
Category:Video Games
Genre:Action
SMS Code:XB2DY06
SHOPTO.NET PRICE RRP SAVING

£29.85

£44.99

£15.14 (33%)


 
Add To Order:
 
Availability:
Last Few - Usually delivered in 24 hours.

Delivery:
UK orders placed before 5.30pm dispatched same day via FREE Royal Mail 1st Class Recorded Signed For delivery.

UK orders placed after 5.30pm dispatched next day via FREE Royal Mail 1st Class Recorded Signed For Delivery.

Delivery Promise:
We're aware that sometimes your items may go missing via Royal Mail, which we have no control over. Royal Mail wait 14 working days to declare a package lost, but we will send you a replacement if you haven't received it after only 3 WORKING DAYS for the UK or 28 WORKING DAYS for the rest of the world to make sure you go through minimum inconvenience and you always get your game the fastest from us. (Subject to completion of our online lost parcel form!)

Region:
UK version

SellTo: sell with sellto
no items currently available
no items currently available

Product Description

Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce

Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce is a game unlike any other in the franchise. Until now, the quintessential Dynasty Warriors experience pitted a lone warrior against thousands of enemies. For the first time in a Dynasty Warriors game, up to four friends can join together to form a "Strikeforce". Working as a team, players can plan coordinated assaults to conquer massive armed fortresses and colossal beasts.

While immense castles, towers and ships serve as the settings for these legendary quests, the lighting-fast action will go where it has never gone before- the skies above. Gifted with new supernatural abilities characters can streak across the skies and battle enemies at high-altitude. With both single-player and multi-player quests, new "air" fighting techniques, radical character customization, new challenges to conquer, and downloadable content, Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce will forever change the way gamers experience the Dynasty Warriors universe.

Eurogamer Review

7/10

Pity Koei, originator and now final bastion of the pseudo-historical battlefield brawler. Its flagship Dynasty Warriors, at one time the biggest-selling series in all of Japan, is viewed by most of the Western world with disdain or, worse, indifference. Once notable for pushing more polygons around an environment than just about anything else and tasking its player to carve their way, often single-handedly, through overwhelming, spear-wielding odds, the series fast settled into a rhythm of bi-annual updates that, on the surface at least, have done little to freshen the formula.

A one-trick war-horse, then? It's a familiar but unfair accusation, as too often critics and gamers ignore each iteration's subtle tweaks and novelties simply because of the aesthetic similarities to what has gone before.

Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce is a concerted attempt by the developer to approach the series in a new way, asking, more forcefully this time, that players reassess this peculiar and bombastic brand of action game. Set within the now-familiar Three Kingdoms era of Ancient China, you choose a faction and a character within that faction to play as and set about winning the war, battle by battle.

These are, in the main, similar to what has gone before, as you cut through enemy troops, a furious one-man blur of steel fury, cartwheeling through the encroaching enemy horde as if suspended on stunt wires. The kill count for each mission often reaches the hundreds, as what the opposition lacks in competence it makes up for in sheer numbers, line after line of jabbing Chinese warriors chipping away at your health as they hassle from all sides.

Once again the visuals are functional rather than beautiful, with plain lighting and scrappy textures and a camera that must be continually wrestled into providing the best window onto the action. As a port of a PSP game, play areas are far smaller than those encountered in, say, Dynasty Warriors 6 or Bladestorm, reducing the impact of what has always been one of the unique selling points of this style of game.

Irritating loading screens punctuate each and every transition from one area to the next and the structure of each mission is abridged and simplistic: go here and defeat this person or go there and acquire that item, with none of the tactical considerations that have crept into the series recently. The voice acting throughout is camp and overstated, like a seventies kung-fu overdub, and despite the rich historical context, storytelling is both brief and shallow.

And yet, despite this litany of shortcomings and mediocrity, an engaging game emerges. In the main this is thanks to the meta-game that surrounds the battles themselves, with a number of character and weapon RPG-style development trees to draw you in. A new town hub is a literal menu: here you approach townsfolk to access the statistical underbelly of the game, where you are given, for the first time in a Dynasty Warriors game, a great deal of flexibility to customise and develop your character, their play style and weaponry, tailoring the game to suit you.

During missions you earn experience, material resources and money that can be spent in the game's various retail outlets. At the academy you spend experience points acquiring Chi powers. Your character can equip up to four Chi skills at once, one attached to each limb, represented as a phosphorus bangle. These range in effect and usefulness from, for example, reducing the speed it takes your character to stand up after being knocked down, to increasing healing items' potency, increasing the speed of your all-important dash or adding an elemental property to your damage.

Likewise, at the workshop you can spend points and resources increasing your character's base ability, attack power, movement and even the frequency and range of enemy drops. Visiting the blacksmith allows you to focus on the weaponry your character carries, either forging new weapons from a dizzying array of types, or adding augmentations to these weapons in their buff slots. Buffs can increase the length of potential combos or grant bonuses to your character such as the speed of their movement on the battlefield, or defence stats and add a secondary tier of strategy to what is already a flexible and rich system.

Weapons and augmentations are purchased with a combination of money and materials earned after each battle, and it's not long before you've acquired enough raw materials to be able to specialise in almost any weapon type available in the game. Moreover, if you're missing any item in particular, you can visit the Market to exchange common items for more rare loot. These imports from Capcom's Monster Hunter suit the Dynasty Warriors universe well, and the fast and tangible improvements to your character's performance on the battlefield makes the potential for tinkering in menus seem worthwhile and responsive.

Side missions are delivered from a notice board in town, while the town's gatekeeper presents those crucial to the story. In both cases, you'll earn bonus experience and loot if you manage to meet specified bonus criteria in battle, by finishing off the enemy's presiding officer within a time limit, or by taking down a set number of enemies. Missions can all be repeated either for loot or to grind, with new battles and chapters opening up as you clear key missions in the story's timeline.

As with all Dynasty Warriors titles, there is a generous amount of content on offer here, with five story chapters for each of the three kingdoms and a raft of characters, outfits and treasures unlockable in each. Strikeforce's other key new component is co-operative play, with the option to fight with up to three other players online. As with Monster Hunter, the emphasis here is as much on showboating to your teammates about the weaponry you've crafted and moves you've customized as it is about clearing stages. The robust netcode and seamless switching between online and offline modes of play in the hub city makes for an agreeable extension to the Dynasty Warriors format.

That's a phrase that could be used to define the whole of Strikeforce; it extends the series in intelligent and welcome ways. While it's in no way the radical rethinking of the genre that Bladestorm was, it pushes the Dynasty Warriors boundaries further than they've moved in years. A package of mixed success then, one that answers its longtime critics on a number of significant levels, but which fails to deliver the sort of polish and presentation required to find a truly global audience.

Comments

There are no comments on this product

add new comment
Login

Not Registered Yet?
Click here to sign up


union jack european flag
STAR BUY
GAME HIGHLIGHTS

verisign logo

SecurityMetrics for PCI Compliance, QSA, IDS, Penetration Testing, Forensics, and Vulnerability Assessment