Sunday 21 April 2024

Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe Review

I normally don't talk about fighting games, but I'm sort of familar enough with the Mortal Kombat and by extension Injustice games that I want to talk about this particular game. 

I always heard this game wasn't very well liked by people and heard it wasn't very good, while I don't think the game is anything amazing since fighting games aren't really my genre, the game is at the very least decent enough for the kind of casual player I am. 

I only played the story mode and while it seems weird that I am primarily talking about the Story Mode for a fighter, I primarily bought this game for it since over the years I heard it was a proto MK9. 

Outside of the fact that the game has two playable sides with MK and DC, it very much plays like MK9 before MK9 you control a certain character for a few fights and then you switch to the next one, I have seen many criticize this system, and while I do very much understand where they are coming from, I kind of like it in the sense it feels like a weird, if somewhat not efficient enough tutorial on how to use certain characters, it's basically sort of like a tutorial mode with a narrative and this works for a casual player like me. I would've just ignored this game entirely if they went with the option of just having Arcade mode and that's it. 

However the problem but at the same time a strength is that since you play as so many different characters, you'll play as a character you like one minute and then a character you like another all though since I'm more familar with MK characters and their movesets over the years, I might've enjoyed playing as the MK characters more than DC, I know Liu Kang's fireballs, Bicycle Kicks, and Flying Kick and I know some of Raiden and Scorpion's moves too. I did like using Lex Luthor on the DC side, so it wasn't all bad. 

I also didn't mind the "3D" aspect of MK vs DC since I felt it did an okay job at feeling familar enough to a guy who plays modern MK and Injustice games, I mostly felt at home with the button and combo button inputs of despite the additional plane. The physics were weird sometimes, but I didn't mind. I also used combo breakers a lot more in MK vs DC by comparison to the Neatherrealm Studios fighters since there are no x-ray attacks. 

However despite all this, the story was kind of a letdown, I wasn't expecting writing masterclass or anything but the whole narrative felt like it could've had more meat on its bones. For example, Darkseid and Shao Khan both iconic villains in their own right combine together to form "Dark Khan" this sounds awesome, this could be a really wacky and over the top silly premise, I even bought the game for that, but instead Dark Khan barely has any screen time or doesn't do much of anything, he's just an end boss and that's it, no villainous acts, no worf effect, nothing to make me dislike him, he's just a boss fight, for such a wild concept, it felt like the writers could've done more with it. 

The rest of the story isn't much better, it's mainly just MK and DC characters, getting surprised or angry at each other then they fight, and then it moves on to the next fight, my big issue is probably just the lack of a geniune plot, it just feels so loose that it's hard to get invested even for a "dumb fighting story" point of view. 

The whole MK and DC playable campaigns also felt like a weird wasted opportunity, I thought with both sides being playable, you were going to play out both perspectives to "get" more of the story but they don't seem to intersect or change that much, probably due to the lack of plot but at the same time, it was kind of a wasted opportunity yet again. 

The voice acting is also decent stuff and it has number of the MK9 and later NRS game VAs too, and outside of Shang Tsung, they get the job done. 

Overall, I complained about the story a lot but I did enjoy the game from a moment to moment gameplay perspective, I'm a casual fighting game player and I doubt I will ever be a hardcore one, but at the same time, for the relatively cheap price I got this game for, I had a decent amount of fun out of it especially for a guy who occasionally plays the NRS game, I was expecting some decent fun and thrills and got just that.

Saturday 13 April 2024

Penny's Big Breakway Review

This was a good time, I wasn't expecting much out of the game and I mainly played it at all because it was one of the few indie games that had a simultaneous console and PC release which I wish was more common among indie games.

I'll start with what I liked first, the game has a great movement system, probably one of the best in 3D platformers that I played in a while, I thought Hell Pie's grapple hook system was innovating but this game takes it to the next level where you don't need to find upgrades, and you can just swing in the air at any time by holding the square button, it just feels amazing to chain multiple jumps and then do a swing to land on a platform. I felt like generally felt like a fast and nimble character most of the time, and the sense of control I get with this movement system can almost feel unrivaled at times, there were times where I thought I was going to die but instead I barely managed to make it, all though there were also times where I did miss jumps too.

This leads to me to the next thing I liked, the checkpoint system, you will be dying pretty often in this game and the best part is that you never get overly chastised for it. The worst that can happen is you losing a lot of points but I'm not really in it for games for that so this never really bugged me, all the checkpoints felt reasonably spaced out and there was never a moment where it felt like the game gave me checkpoint starvation, which is great since checkpoint starvation is one of my least favorite tropes in games.

The camera system is innovating for a 3D platformer too, I'm surprised I can't name many 3D platformers with this system, it felt like the old God of War games in how you have no control over the camera and it constantly follows you, the camera isn't behind the character's back like in 3D Sonic or Spark the Electric Jester 2 either. It's s surprisingly good system and I welcome more of it in the genre.

What I dislike about the game is that it can be pretty buggy, I had a grappling hook bug happen where I'd fall off for no reason, but it seems that got patched after since I never fell off once after I picked up the game again later. However, I did clip through walls, and the floor a few times so there is that to deal with just be warned.

The controls are mostly fine but using the analog stick can be cumbersome especially during some sections where they are timed and you need to be precise, these aren't too common but it can get grating trying to say aim a bomb directly at a rock formation you want destroyed as you are moving through the level. It's nothing too bad. There is one annoying thing where trying to build up speed momentum and not having the character just move seems to be a herculan task. Sometimes, I held R2 and I would start to build some momentum and other times I held R2 and the character would just move instead, I never managed to figure this system out.

Finally, the bosses are quite weak, they aren't "terrible" but 95% of them can be beaten pretty easily too, every time I beat most of the bosses, I'm like, "that's it?" The patterns can be pretty simple and the methods of getting to damaging them are so simple that you can beat them in probably less than 10 minutes, with the exception of an Ape Escape styled race boss that happens late in the game, this part is the hardest and a massive difficulty spike, you not only need to win a race where the boss constantly teleports a few steps ahead of you but you need to collect more tokens than the boss as well. This almost made me quit the game, but I was able to beat him but it felt like a close call more than anything, I'm willing to bet this would be a stumping point for many people who play the game.

There is also that 3D platformer issue of accidentally missing a fast jump and constantly adjusting the left analog stick hoping you will make the landing but I'm sort of used to this.

Overall, Penny's Big Breakway isn't my favorite game but I had a good time considering I didn't know much of what I was getting into outside of hearing it was a 3D platformer and how much I gravitate towards the genre. I'd say it's up there with Spark the Electric Jester 2 as a high speed 3D platformer that does 3D Sonic better than 3D Sonic.

Thursday 11 April 2024

X-Men Legends 2: Rise of Apocalypse Review

I played the first X-Men Legends back when I was a kid and I decided to play this game first since I always wanted to as a kid as well but never go to, might go back to the first game one of these days.

The best way of describing Rise of Apocalypse is that it is a weird precursor to Marvel Ultimate Alliance and there might be a number of comparisons between the former and the latter throughout this write up.

My thoughts on this game is that it is "good" but at the same time it felt like it could've been so much more. Definately play this game if you are an X-Men fan if you aren't, the game is going to be a much harder sell.

The story is solid, but only as a video game narrative to give enough context to what you are doing more than because the story is memorable. I do think Apocalypse is portrayed pretty well, he has an awesome design and is decently acted, he at the very least is a competent villain if most his feats are mostly done off screen, I couldn't help but be reminded of Ultimate Alliance's Dr. Doom and the Masters of Evil, while Legends 2 does an okay job at characterizing and making you dislike it's villains with Apocalypse defeating Beast and mind controlling him and Angel being taken and turned to Arcangel, MUA has Dr. Doom and the Masters of Evil interact more often and Doom is shown in cutscenes doing more villianous acts by comparison to Apocalypse.

Legends 2's story isn't bad but it just feels like a decent game story to connect levels together, I really felt like they could've done more with the idea of the X-Men and Brotherhood teaming up. Magneto for example is a playable character but he only gets acknowledged within the story at the start and at the end of the game, outside of some optional dialogue with a villain on Genosha, Magneto spends most of the game being silent, which is pretty disappointing considering the premise.

There is a solid amount of voice acting here and most of it is pretty good minus some characters who just talk way too slowly, Patrick Stewart is even in the game much to my surprise and he gets a good amount of dialogue. The game also does a very good job at keeping you up to speed if you aren't familar with the X-Men with lots of NPCs giving background information on the plot or the various characters so if this your introduction to the franchise rather than you being apathetic towards it, this isn't the worst place to start.

Okay story aside, how is the gameplay? Much like the story, it's not bad and can be pretty good but it ultimately depends on how much of a fan of the source material you are. I generally enjoyed the gameplay on a service level and I did like how unlike X-Men the arcade game, you can use your mutant powers as much as you want all though it's on a somewhat long cooldown, however you can use energy packs to replenish your power meter, all though my strategy was to use my fists on occasion and them spam powers between the 4 playable characters untill everyone is dead. Wolverine was my major damage dealer, while Cyclops, Storm and Magneto were primarily support characters.

You can generally do this strategy throughout 95% of the game, the only major difficulty spike in the whole game was a weird boss rush of sorts where you had to fight Omega Red and Mikhail within short proxmity of each other, Omega Red can drain health packs pretty heavily if you aren't using energy packs to use your strongest moves and Mikhail has 3 very challenging phases after which is even harder than any boss afterwards. Once you get past this difficulty spike, the game never gets hard again outside of maybe on occasion one of your characters accidentally getting knocked out from exteneded damage and they hit harder faster than the auto health pack use can kick in. This is another aspect I prefer in Marvel Ultimate Alliance since it has health and energy drops rather than having limited recovery items.

The level design much like the rest of the game does an okay job at feeling like levels you can explore and the very least they don't feel like a string of scripted set pieces but at the same time, I'm rather mixed of the game having a minimap and the game telling you where to go, I was looking for a more relaxing game where I just wanted to beat people up and not think too hard and the game pulled that off. There is a few levels like Madri Temple and the Great Pyramid where you might need to backtrack, but these are mostly straightforward if jarring pace breakers compared to 85% of the game.

The bosses and some levels have some decent gimmicks to break up the pace, the part where you need to defend a SHIELD Agent from Sentinels as he is preparing bombs, the fight with Arcangel, the final fight in the Madri Temple, the boss with Beast and Sinister and the Apocalypse fight being noteworthy examples.

The music isn't as good as the first game outside of the Madri Temple theme. The game can also be a little too long for how the game doesn't have an overwhemling amount of story, I did start to feel it by the time I got to the Great Pyramid, your mileage may vary however. 

Overall, Legends 2 is a good game but nothing really spectacular, if you are new to the series or an already existing fan, the game is worth checking out, but if you were already apathetic towards the franchise to begin with, best to skip this one. 

Monday 8 April 2024

Tomb Raider 1996 Remaster Review

This was a game I always hear about and Lara Croft's legacy can't be ignored. I did originally play the TR Survivor games and the Crystal Dynamics reboot trilogy before that but I would always hear about how good the Core Design particularly this game was. At the same time, there are your fair share of modern gamers and even retro gamers who are used to the Mario style of 3D platforming often critcizing this game. So where do I fit in?

I really like it, I can't deny if this was the original PS1 version of the game with the save crystals or the PC version without controller support, I wouldn't be able to get to the end and I can probably picture myself not liking the game even with it's hiccups, the remaster helped increase my chances of enjoying the game. I also played mostly with the original controls with some input remaps primarily putting interact and shoot to R2.

With that out of the way, I mostly had a blast if not rather exhausting time playing this particular Tomb Raider game.

I'll start with what I liked and is the platforming and level design. I'll start with the platforming, be warned, this is not your typical 3D platformer with analog control or heavily automated movement. Lara essentially moves like a tank where she has to jump to a series of sqaures and the name of the game is to judge the distance and line up your jumps to the next sqaure. Ledge grabbing isn't magnetized like in many games that come after instead you must time your jumps with the interact held down in order to grab ledges to avoid falling, this took me a while to get used to and I never fully got the hang of it even by the end but at the same time, this slow paced form of platfoming does give TR 1996 it's own unique and interesting brand of 3D platforming, it's esstentially more of a 3D transition of what cinematic 2D platformers like Prince of Persia tried to do. There isn't many games that really play like this in terms of how you interact with the ledges and how moment to moment jumps are handled.

The next positive is the level design, this is some of the best level design ever put in a game, these levels are lengthy and exhausting especially if you minimize walkthrough use, but I was already aquainted with this style, of backtracking, pulling switches, collecting keys and items and the whole, "here's a big open space, now figure out where to go as you are going through it" with other late 90s games like Resident Evil, Shadow Man, and shooters like Duke Nukem 3D and Syphon Filter to name a few and TR 1996 felt right at home for me while also having some surprises of it's own. For example the Egypt loop back twice and these are both segmented isolated levels, stuff like Duke Nukem 3D never had stuff like this. The Great Pyramid level always reminded me of how far I was from the bottom of where I started from by constantly looping back to the center with platforms placed on different sides and when I got to the top especially with how long these levels are, getting there felt pretty satisfying. If you love good level design with barely any waypoints and guides, then this game is a must play. The only issue I have with the levels is that towards the end, the game did have a lot of out of nowhere traps that can insta kill you, but this remedied by the remaster's save system.

Now I only have two major issues with the game and these could be deal breakers for some but the first I have is the lack of story. I don't really care for story in games as much as others but TR 1996's plot and characters are so paper thin that I almost with there was more actual context to what was even going on, who are the villains Lara fights' why is there a dude with a skateboard with SMGs? What was Lara's backstory and her plight? For a character that is so famous arguably more so than the games themselves, you know so little about Lara in her debut appreance, definately a strong case of first installment weirdness. That and there is so much gameplay and so little story while charming, it can sort start to feel empty with the lack of overall context to what I'm doing. This might be a positive to someone else with all that said.

The next issue and this one bugs me is the combat, while I get what the devs were trying to do, this isn't a full on TPS, combat is supposed to keep the player on his toes when doing the moment puzzle solving and platforming and it's supposed to provide some degree of tension, the combat just feels awful, and also makes me glad for the saving anywhere in the remaster. Lara can't strafe and most fights involve jumping around so the enemies can never hit you but the controls to do the sommersaults don't feel as quick and useful in the moment as they should. The auto aim doesn't feel that reliable and locks on to dead enemies too on top of the double tapping the d pad while weapons undrawn is where Lara will turn like a tank or actually jump. I never felt like I was decent at it.

Overall, Tomb Raider 1996 is a very good game depending on what you are getting into. If you are used to more traditional mascot platformers or games with heavy amounts of automated platforming, you might not like this game, but if you are open enough this might be a game you might come to like. 

Saturday 30 March 2024

Hi Fi Rush Review

I was planning to play this game for some time, I was originally going to play it on PC but I waited since there was going to be a PS5 version instead and I'm glad I did since I prefer to play on console than PC. Hi Fi Rush is now on a console I actually own. That said, I was also hesistant on playing the game since it was apparently a "rhythm game" of sorts and those aren't really my thing, I am willing to tolerate them in some random mini game to break up the pace or if a game feels like a loose inspiration of them like the free flow combat in the Arkham games or the platforming in Prince of Persia but generally speaking, I would never go out of my way for a genre like this.

With all that said, I enjoyed the game, but like many character action games, I only got a causal enjoyment from it. I like the combat in the moment but so much of the advanced combos and tactics I really don't care for.

The timing hits on the beat to get higher damage I am not sure is a gimmick or you actually need to do, it "felt" like I was timing my hits to the beat, but at the same time, for the timing rank I never scored very high, I was at the same time also getting an S rank during moment to moment combat and I was clearing combat encounters at a quick rate, I wanted to try on very hard on mode to see if it was just a fluke or I was actually that skilled but this leads to a big issue that prevented me from doing so despite very hard appearing to be forgiving, and that is the parry system.

I didn't even know the game had a heavy emphasis on parrying and my big issue is that the timing just feels way too strict and it almost feels like a rhythm game on hard mode where the circle to time the parry only pops up once and the rest of the parry prompts felt like I had to be very good at spotting the animation frame on when to parry. The Koriesca boss was a nightmare because of this or any enemy where parrying was a requirement to defeat them was. I just couldn't get the rhythm down and it felt like a completely different game every time it was there, the moment to moment fighting felt like I could just be decent at this style of game to succeed where anything with parrying felt like I had to be geniunely good.

I think there is a reason why I have seen a Reddit thread complaining about it and how the devs would later on patch in an accessiblity option where the parry window was super forgiving, unfortunately this option is only on normal so I just gave on very hard and played on normal. I did wish the game did a better job at being a more consistent, "rhythm games for people who don't play the genre" overall.

The style system apparently has your attacks be stronger and encounrages your meter to reach S at all times, but the only issue is that it's too easy to be at S rank at all times so it's hard to notice a geniune difference.

Other than that since I played on normal, the game is perfectly adequate for someone who gets casual enjoyment from the genre, I like how the support characters is something the game actually made me use like Peppermint for blue shields and Macaron for green armor, the game taught to me in a way where I started to use them actively and it felt like an extension of my moveset rather than never using them at all so good job to the game there.

I like how the game does a good job at almost never needing to use recovery items instead the game will reward you with health depending on how well you are doing which is something I like since it never feels like I need to look at my health and then retreat and look into a menu then activate the item, I like how it kept me in the action at all times.

The platforming at first felt a little obnoxious in how basic it was but later in the game, it did start to throw some more complex time challenges especially when Koresica joins your team where you have to use her special ability to activate a generator and then have a limited number of time to make to the end of a a platforming gaunlet. It does have the Platinum games problem of not doing much inbetween the major arena fights where it's just, "here's a platforming section, and here's arena combat" but it the platforming in this does have slightly more going on than in something like Bayonetta does especially later on.

The bosses are solid and enjoyable they aren't super great but they do a good enough job at filling in that larger than life action sequence in between group fights, the mid boss checkpoints did remove some frustration especially the fights later in the game.

The voice acting is pretty good and the story is serviceable, Chai is a little obnoxious at first but he gets slightly more tolerable as the game goes on. The character interactions overall are entertaining enough, nothing that is going revolutionize anything but it gets the job done.

Overall, I was expecting to get some casual enjoyment out of Hi Fi Rush and I got just that, I don't think it's a masterpiece but it's decent enough.

Mario vs. Donkey Kong(Nintendo Switch) Review

This might be the most, "its not bad but not anything amazing" game I have played in a while. Nothing about the game is outright terrible but at the same time, it's not exactly masterclass in game design either. The whole game feels like Nintendo wanted to remake this particular game because the recent Mario movie had DK and Mario be "shonen rivals" and Nintendo wanted to cash in off that.

My big issue with the game is the asking price for it and how since this is a Nintendo 1st party Switch game trying to find a discount for it is going to be something you have to go out of your way for.

You can probably beat the first 8 worlds and get the first credits drop within less than probably 4-5 hours, it seems the most of the game's content and value comes from getting 100% it and doing everything the game has to offer, which doesn't really interest me. I normally don't like complaining about this stuff since I was looking for a short game to play but the whole thing while not "terrible" just feels underwhelming. It's a little confusing what I am saying but the best way of describing the game is that the gameplay is "fine" but the content feels lacking. Maybe adding in 10 worlds instead of 8 would've helped.

With all that said, what exactly do you do in Mario vs. DK? What if 2D Mario was a puzzle platformer rather than a traditional one? You get this game. The game overall has this very relaxing and chill tone going on that I really enjoy, if you like games like that this is worth playing, I played on Casual Mode since timers while solving puzzles stresses me out. The lives system is pointless on casual mode especially since you will have to try pretty hard to lose them all on that setting.

The whole game mainly consists of getting keys where Donkey Kong is than getting the Mario toy inside the level and you don't need to get the optional gifts in the levels either, you can run straight for the Mario Toys and the game will not chastise you for skipping the "optional" gifts much to my surprise which adds more to my point that you'll get the most out of the game if you aim to 100% it.

The game controls decently enough, Mario has just enough weight and feels precise enough for the most part that it never feels like I am killing myself due to doing things I never intended to do.

I am not big on puzzlers but solving the puzzles in this particular game 95% of the time felt engaging and intuitive, I rarely if ever needed to look up a guide and when I did it's mainly because of an ability I forgot Mario can even do which is an issue I always with the genre since it's easy to be stuck on a part and you are stuck because has reintroduced the ability in a while like for example being able to throw objects upwards or Mario's long jump, to the latter's credit once the game reintroduced after spending multiple levels without doing so, I was abusing it left and right.

The level design and scenarios are mostly "fine", I wish the levels before the first credits roll had more abilities stack on to each other rather than introduce one or two gimmicks in one stand alone level, then disregard it in the next level after. For example the shield enemy might get introduced in one level, but the following one he might not pop up again or how there might be fireballs or lasers in one or two levels but they might not show up until 3-4 levels later.

None of this is "bad" by any means since the mere act of solving the puzzle in each individual level generally hits the sweet spot, "of not too easy but not too hard" but it does add more reasons on why I am just sort of lukewarm on the game. Also, while I think the brisk levels sort of add to the game's charm, they sort of make long term engagement hard since for me, I think the right length for any video game level is 20-30 minutes, anything lower or higher might take me out of it but your mileage may vary.

Overall, Mario vs. DK is not a "terrible" or "great" game, it's an enjoyable game that I feel like is a bit more biased towards people who like to 100% games rather than have that inital first time through feel incredible. If you can somehow find the game for cheap and you love to do everything a game has to offer, I'd say the game is worth checking out.

Jak and Daxter: The Lost Frontier Review

I am going to start off the review by saying I never even planned on playing this game, I spent years avoiding it because I always heard how "bad" it was and even from some other people on how they were also lukewarm on the series like I was saying that the game isn't good.

If it hadn't been for the game appearing on PS Premium Classics and me playing it on that for a couple of hours, I wouldn't even have played Lost Frontier at all. However, do not buy the PS Classics version as of now since there is a Far Drop crash quarter way into the game that I recall not being patched, however due to me giving up on waiting for a patch, I emulated the PS2 version and simpily put, the PS2 version is the way to play the game, the controls are far superior in the PS2 version than the PSP and emulated version on PS5. Mainly due to the weapon selection being on the D pad and the eco ability shortcuts, the latter is a big reason why I adovocate playing the PS2 version since the shortcuts are a far more intuitive way of using them rather than individually selecting them on the D pad. Being able to use all your abilities at once without switching just makes the game less clunky to play. You can just reach a spot to use your contextual eco power and then immediately use it without, awkwardly cycling through your ability to use the power you want. Shoot weapon is also mapped to R1 on PS2 and camera control is right stick adding more reasons to play the PS2 version.

Sony made a bad move by having the PS5 version be an emulated PSP version rather than choosing the PS2 version. The Far Drop crash as of now only adds insult to injury.

With that finally out of the way, I liked the game A LOT more than I thought I was going into it, I was expecting myself to drop the game after a few hours because I heard there is a huge emphasis on aerial combat and that there is barely any platforming, so I was expecting it to be a repeat of Jak 3 where instead of endless mini games, it's aerial combat and to my immense surprise, there is a good amount of platforming, more so than Jak 3 ever did. The first few sections of the game had a good amount of it, the aerial combat was there but it was more of a pace breaker along with the Dark Daxter sections.

What surprised me was how Lost Frontier during it's on foot sections, introduced new abilities, gave me a little while to get the hang of it and then gave me sections where I had to use those abilities during gameplay challenges. For example, I got a statue displacement power, the game introduced it to me to get s grasp on it and then I was doing a bunch of statue displacement powers to get furthur through the platforming gaunlet, the slo mo power even gets more use than it did in Jak 3 all though I would've liked more mandatory use of it.

Another example and the best bits of game design is when you have to use the statue displacement ability in conjunction with your other powers to name two examples, I had to use the eco crystals and the statue displacement in conjuction to across to the other side of the level, or how I had to use the eco shield and the displacement ability together to get past a pool dark eco and get line of sight on the statues as certain parts were rising. I was not expecting this at all especially with how Jak 2 had boring open world traversal, and Jak 3 was mini game overload. I just wished the game had more stuff like this because it could've been a stand out game in a series were I am not a big fan of it's direct sequels.

The aerial combat is decently fleshed out but it's either too hard or too easy. Your default ship is insanely weak but if you use the Sky Raider, the combat for the most part becomes a little bit too easy and the game has a heavy emphasis on it and it never managed to find the right difficulty.

Other issues I have is that I was bummed that roll jump, long jump and hoverboard are gone but I gave up on Jak leaning it's into it's movement mechanics a while ago.

The aforementioned aerial combat just hits in the realm of "okay" and the Dark Daxter sections are too few and far between to even be worth talking about.

The gunplay and moment to moment combat isn't very good, you don't have a dodge button still and still no ability to strafe and most of it just consist of spamming imbuse and using powerful weapons like chaingun to kill enemies until they die. Like the aerial combat and Dark Daxter sections, it isn't "great" but for the most part it's serviceable yet again, I gave up on the series trying to integrate combat and platforming seemlessly together a while ago.

Overall, if Lost Frontier just leaned into the game design I mentioned earlier, I would glowingly recommend the game but as it stands, it's an enjoyable game in a series where the only games I like are Precursor Legacy, Daxter and Jak X. It surpassed my extremely low expectations I had for it. It's a decently made game for the bad reputation I always heard it had.