Should we be excited for NG2? The early 90s Japanese monster movie aesthetics remain, and it doesn't look as good now as NG did when it was first released on the original Xbox. And apparently the camera is worse than ever, and it trots out archaic game mechanics (horrible platforming sections, repeated boss fights, invisible barriers, etc.).SineSwiper wrote:Meh. I'll play it later, when they port it over to 360. You guys should be excited about Ninja Gaiden 2.
I was hoping it'd be the generational leap for action games than DMC4 wasn't, but the reviews so far don't fill me with hope:
Eurogamer wrote:No other action game comes close to Ninja Gaiden 2 for looks, for animation or for ferocity... Even the solid and enjoyable Devil May Cry 4 doesn't have the mesmerising quality that watching someone play NG2 exerts. The problem, sadly, arises when you actually pick up the controller yourself.
1UP wrote:If only any other area of the game received such loving attention. It may be a game about combat, but it has more than its fair share of simple platforming and exploring. Both of those elements are done horribly, as hero Ryu Hayabusa is regularly at odds with his surroundings... The awful camera -- one of the worst I've dealt with in a 3D environment -- compounds those problems and unnecessarily complicates the combat.
I am still excited for the game, but I'm worried for it also. I'm starting to think the the first 3D Ninja Gaiden game may have just been a fluke.IGN wrote:And yet, the game doesn't feel as special as Ninja Gaiden did... The game has been focused from its predecessor into a more pure action affair, for better or for worse, but the formula remains the same -- frustrating camera and all.