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Haven park switch review
Haven park switch review








#HAVEN PARK SWITCH REVIEW UPGRADE#

But unlike most rogue-likes, which steal away all your progress every time you die (and you will die, a lot), here you retain much of what you collect in a run, allowing you to upgrade your stats, unlock new weapons and pick up valuable advice from the House of Hades’ colourful residents upon each return. Hades is a rogue-like dungeon crawler, which means procedurally generated levels that ensure no escape attempt is ever the same as the last. Encouraged by the Gods of Olympus, Zagreus is determined to escape the underworld and his fun sponge of a father, but doing so is no easy job. In Hades you play as Zagreus, the rebellious son of the titular god of the dead. That Supergiant Games’ dungeon-crawling indie masterpiece beat AAA big-hitter The Last of Us Part II to our 2020 game of the year award is a testament to just how brilliant it is. For Final Fantasy fans this is a must-play, but we reckon anyone will fall in love with this one if they give it a chance. But rarely is it done this elegantly, and with an almost comically incredible selection of soundtracks to revisit. You’re mainly timing button presses and stick gestures with symbols that move across the screen to keep in time with whatever song is playing, with your team’s success in battle dependent on how you perform. Theatrhythm doesn’t do anything drastically different with the basic rhythm game template. Theatrhythm Final Bar Line crams in 385 tracks that span the entirety of the Final Fantasy series to date, and lets you choose between over 100 characters to add to your party. One the 3DS’ best games is simply bigger and better in every way in the Switch sequel, which takes 35 years’ worth of epic Final Fantasy Music and plonks it into a rhythm game that’s both easy to pick up and incredibly hard to master. Buy Theatrhythm Final Bar Line from the Nintendo store here.








Haven park switch review