Pretty enjoyable sequel. In spite of the fact that this game gives you the ability to save anywhere, it's much more challenging that the first game. It also comes in handy too since the game can be unstable even on console too. The sound can randomly cut out and you have to boot the game again for it to return. My autosave got corrupted and if it weren't my other saves that I made prior, I might've had to restart a lengthy and challenging level again. I was never expecting this to be a sequel difficulty spike but it is.
Forgive Me Father 2 does walk a very fine tight rope of being challenging but fair especially in the early levels. When the game starts, there isn't an overwhelming amount of ammo and levels can be very stingy with healing items, they don't restore an overhwhelming amount of health. It can sort of enter into the realm of something like Resident Evil 4 where you aren't given an overwhelming amount of health packs and ammo and you have to make due with what you can find. There is also a Doom 3 style flashlight system too where there's dark areas and enemies can attack you while looking there. You have to to press the fashlight button to keep it charged.There can be a fair number of cheap deaths and without saving anywhere I would've had to lower the difficulty to one of the lower settings or just drop. It's very easy to be low on hp and just get killed by a random enemy. It can be infuriating. The temptation to lower to easy was too great but every time I was going to give in there was a health pack lying around and I was able to turn the odds back to my favor. It's quite the example of early game hell.
When you unlock more powerful weapons with the tokens and get buy more cards for the dark tome, things do start to get easier especially when you find a play style that suits you. I went with a style where I was able to get back health when using dark tome and getting hit powered up my meter. There will be some random deaths from time to time due to how much one enemy projectile can take a quarter of your health. With the ability to save anywhere, I had to be careful whenever I did it to avoid an endless death loop. The different weapons you can get with the tokens does seem to give the player different play styles. I've seen some use the base revolver but I prefer the fish smg for how it tears into enemies up close.
The level design is mostly good with it being the expansive key card hunts you expect from the genre. One addition I love is that the game adds a small split screen effect found in games like Timesplitters 2 where when the player pushes a switch or kills enough enemies there will be a screen indicating what you did. It does a solid job at eliminating the guess work on what the switch activated a part of the level or what opened up.
Some of the bosses are okay a stand out being a boss that is basically a first person Sonic boss fight with guns.
The art style and animation are still fantastic especially with exaggerated blood and gore for the enemy death animations. Makes the guns just feel that much punchier. The voice acting for the main character is okay even if it feels like he's constantly speaking Frank Miller monologues.
There are some issues there is a level late game where you are in an egyptian pyramid and not only do you have to find colored keys but also activated around 25 switches. I strongly dislike level objectives like this since if you are doing it for the first time, you are bound to accidentally miss one switch. Afterwards finding the one you missed becomes searching a needle in a haystack. I got lucky when finding the ones I missed and had to look up a walkthrough on.
One major change I dislike is reloading. I'm starting to dislike the idea of reloading especially in this style of game since enemies will be relentless attacking you and I want to retaliate but then my character is stuck in a reload animation and I'm stuck until it's finally over. It can be very inconvienent when getting swarmed and attack from all sides.
The enemies that can fire laser beams from afar can be very annoying due to how far their beams can reach and can kill you in seconds. It can lead to some cheap deaths. There is an exploding barrel enemy but he's too infrequent to get annoyed by him.
Overall, FMF2 is a solid sequel to the first game. It did a good job at innovating what that game did without feeling like it was overly rethreading what that game did.
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