As much as its hated its required to make the game interesting and fresh all the times. I also want to point out the importance of rng in video games. Maybe its just not my cup of tea its one of those games which beautifully follow the principle of easy to learn hard to master. Comparing Sekiro to games like dark souls, DMC, ninja Gaiden, nioh etc you will realize how shallow the combat really is. Hell for being a shinobi you aren't even supposed to be mobile during boss fights(except for DoH and guardian ape) and ironically being mobile during the boss fights will only get you killed. Sure occasionally you have to jump to counter sweeps and dash for mikiri(even though you can parry it easily) but that's all there is to the combat, it just looks good but is mechanically inferior. The bosses are aesthetically pleasing fights but if you narrow it down all you do is time the L1 and as long as you do so there is no real threat at all. This type of combat don't make this game hard but shallow and boring. I love this game don't get me wrong I even completed it till ng+5 for the sake of achievements but I don't like the fact that the entire combat revolves around a single button press: L1. We can’t wait for everyone to discover what’s in store for the game.” “Collaborating with Activision on Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice has been a very exciting experience for us,” said Hidetaka Miyazaki, president and game director at FromSoftware. “With Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice many FromSoftware team members, including myself, are thrilled to be exploring themes of Sengoku Japan and ninja for the first time. The busshi dubs you Sek iro, the one-armed wolf and, armed with your katana and new prosthetic, your only goal is to rescue your lord and regain your honor. As a Shinobi, or ninja, you will unleash an arsenal of deadly prosthetic tools and powerful ninja abilities while you blend stealth, vertical traversal, and visceral head to head combat in bloody confrontations.Īfter being left for dead by the Ashina Clan, who kidnapped your young lord and severed your arm, you awake to find that a mysterious busshi (or Japanese sculptor) has replaced your arm with an incredible prosthetic, allowing you to use many ingenious gadgets and tools. Explore late 1500s Sengoku Japan, a brutal period of constant life and death conflict, as you come face to face with larger than life foes in the dark and twisted world of Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice.
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