Been playing it all night. I was hesitant because samurai games tend to get perverted by their presentation, going off the rails and into anime territory so I'm not usually a fan. I had a hard time getting into Sekiro and button mashing with swords never made a lot of sense to me. This one does swordplay amazingly well and manages to stay well grounded and engaging without combat feeling like a chore. I'm loving it.
It has a ton in common with the newer AC games but the setup is a little tighter. You don't always have the option to run in yelling for people to come at you because the enemy - invading mongolians - have studied the samurai's code and are using it against you so they'll start killing hostages or whatever so you're encouraged to stay quiet. The main character hates this, however, since he was born and raised samurai and killing without looking someone in the eyes is what thieves and animals do. So there's an interesting wrinkle there, do you rush in and defend the hostage in open combat or do you swallow all that and go in smart? As it goes on you get new tools and gadgets that help either way.
But yeah, as far as open world goes there's all the usual stuff. Collecting things, random encounters, base raids, horse riding, side quests. What I like is that everything has a motivation to it as essentially you're Tsushima's last surviving peacekeeper and the people need real help and lives are almost always at stake.
That sounds like a good Assassin's Creed game to me. Is good enough to get within the first week or wait? Since it's not Ubisoft, it probably won't drop as quickly as Assassin's Creed.
I don't regret it and I haven't loved a lot this summer. I'm not one to push for a buy if I'm not genuinely enjoying it, but I say pick it up. Also:
It's the last PS4 exclusive.
PS5 is teasing upgrades for PS4 games and this is a AAA title, so it's likely. This also means they'll be hesitant to discount it.
If it goes on sale, it probably won't be until November when the big yearly sales hit.
Edit: Now that I think about it, if you loved Sekiro this is a must get. Combat is 75% the same but Sekiro really felt like it was geared for 1 on 1 combat but it often hit you with fights where you were outnumbered. Tsushima fixes that but still doesn't hold your hand in combat when shit hits the fan and 4 more guys roll up in the middle of a fight.
Based on the size of the map on first viewing, its likely minimum 30 hours. So I'd say full price is worth it if it sounds up your alley.
And one thing worth mentioning that other guy didn't touch on. Game is fucking gorgeous. Sounds like its melting my original model PS4 with the sheer quality of its graphics. You might spend chunks of time just staring into open fields of flowers.
Shit your main character will reach down the side of his horse to run his fingers through the flowers and that's the most 10/10 gesture I've seen.
Been playing it all night. I was hesitant because samurai games tend to get perverted by their presentation, going off the rails and into anime territory so I'm not usually a fan. I had a hard time getting into Sekiro and button mashing with swords never made a lot of sense to me. This one does swordplay amazingly well and manages to stay well grounded and engaging without combat feeling like a chore. I'm loving it.
Does it play like Assassin's Creed?
Also, Sekiro was amazing.
It has a ton in common with the newer AC games but the setup is a little tighter. You don't always have the option to run in yelling for people to come at you because the enemy - invading mongolians - have studied the samurai's code and are using it against you so they'll start killing hostages or whatever so you're encouraged to stay quiet. The main character hates this, however, since he was born and raised samurai and killing without looking someone in the eyes is what thieves and animals do. So there's an interesting wrinkle there, do you rush in and defend the hostage in open combat or do you swallow all that and go in smart? As it goes on you get new tools and gadgets that help either way.
But yeah, as far as open world goes there's all the usual stuff. Collecting things, random encounters, base raids, horse riding, side quests. What I like is that everything has a motivation to it as essentially you're Tsushima's last surviving peacekeeper and the people need real help and lives are almost always at stake.
That sounds like a good Assassin's Creed game to me. Is good enough to get within the first week or wait? Since it's not Ubisoft, it probably won't drop as quickly as Assassin's Creed.
I don't regret it and I haven't loved a lot this summer. I'm not one to push for a buy if I'm not genuinely enjoying it, but I say pick it up. Also:
It's the last PS4 exclusive.
PS5 is teasing upgrades for PS4 games and this is a AAA title, so it's likely. This also means they'll be hesitant to discount it.
If it goes on sale, it probably won't be until November when the big yearly sales hit.
Edit: Now that I think about it, if you loved Sekiro this is a must get. Combat is 75% the same but Sekiro really felt like it was geared for 1 on 1 combat but it often hit you with fights where you were outnumbered. Tsushima fixes that but still doesn't hold your hand in combat when shit hits the fan and 4 more guys roll up in the middle of a fight.
Based on the size of the map on first viewing, its likely minimum 30 hours. So I'd say full price is worth it if it sounds up your alley.
And one thing worth mentioning that other guy didn't touch on. Game is fucking gorgeous. Sounds like its melting my original model PS4 with the sheer quality of its graphics. You might spend chunks of time just staring into open fields of flowers.
Shit your main character will reach down the side of his horse to run his fingers through the flowers and that's the most 10/10 gesture I've seen.