In past Warriors games, generals were designed to hit harder with greater difficulties, so seeing them add some more unique skills and strategies to your opponents makes the encounters more exciting. They can also deflect your attacks, leaving you wide open to attack. ![]() Enemy generals this time around are no pushovers as they can pull off some powerful attacks that can leave you scurrying off to find health if you aren’t paying attention. You can, of course, go back and replay cleared missions in Free-Roam mode, allowing you to play with whoever you want, but the story is always locked to specific characters. For the most part, you’ll take control of Nobunaga, but some missions see you take control of other characters under Nobunaga’s command. Unlike past Warriors games, the story mode this time around limits you to specific characters that played a role in a specific battle. It’s a simple game that somehow manages to hook you in and keep you playing for hours. You select a character from the games vast number of playable heroes and villains, and you go to battle against thousands of enemies in hack and slash melee combat. Those who have played a Warriors game before know just what they’re getting into. ![]() Great RPG Improvements Keep The Constant Combat Feeling Fresh After a few chapters in you’ll unlock Mitsuhide Akechi’s campaign and see the story from his perspective. As you progress, the story will branch out and allow you to participate in battles that took place when Nobunaga was preoccupied in another battle or too far away to lend a hand. While the game is loading, you’ll constantly be given bios about the actual historical figures you encounter in the game and what role they each played during this troubling time of the Sengoku Period in Japan. One cool addition that I adored was the loading screens.
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