Clouds gather over Raiden
Published 5:00 am Friday, March 15, 2013
Raiden has come a long way from the inexperienced wuss who disappointed fans everywhere. His transformation into an unstoppable cyborg ninja was revealed in “Metal Gear Solid 4,” where he dispatched enemies with improbable cinematic flair. After that, fans forgave him for replacing Solid Snake in “MGS 2,” and the unthinkable happened: Raiden became cool. Players wanted to control him. “Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance” finally puts his stylish and brutal repertoire at your fingertips, but this cyborg ninja continues to linger in the shadow of his betters.
“Revengeance” capitalizes on over-the-top combat in the vein of “Bayonetta” and “Devil May Cry.” Raiden faces off against hordes of robots and cyborg soldiers, chops them into bits with a high-frequency blade and generally looks awesome while doing so. He fights weird bosses, gains new weapons and purchases new moves and upgrades. I know all of that sounds perfect, but the pieces don’t fit together properly. “Revengeance” seems engineered to look like a great action game from a distance, only to fall apart upon closer inspection.
Combat is entertaining, but “style over substance” is the defining theme. The graphics are fantastic, the moves look cool and the framerate is smooth, but battles aren’t demanding. Raiden has a decent selection of special attacks, but the lack of variety in enemies and encounters means that you aren’t required to master them. Basic button mashing is usually fine, since few foes need to be approached with specific tactics. The formula for success gets old quickly: slash away until you see an enemy telegraph an attack, block and resume slashing.
Blocking is easier said than done, since it isn’t assigned to a single button. You need to tilt the stick toward your enemy and press attack simultaneously, which causes Raiden to throw up his defense. If your timing is off, he swipes his sword at thin air, which is the worst possible alternative to blocking. You can’t just hold a direction while performing regular attacks and expect to block; each one requires the stick to be moved from a neutral position. With practice, you can master this clunky mechanic and make it work reliably, but that doesn’t make it good — especially since it’s your main way of avoiding damage (despite a cumbersome dodge-attack move).
Since you have limited control over your own defense, staying on the offense is important. You earn multiple special weapons, but you have to pause the action to bring up an item selection screen (which does not open if you are jumping, attacking or being attacked) in order to use them. Since you can’t swap out weapons on the fly mid-combo, they don’t ever get to work together. For instance, Raiden gets a weapon capable of a long-range grapple (like Dante’s angel pull in the latest “DMC”), which grants increased mobility. However, you can’t simultaneously equip that weapon with anything but Raiden’s basic sword. The same thing goes for the high-damage pincer sword or the area-clearing polearm. This keeps Raiden’s arsenal segregated, preventing players from experimenting with combinations and harnessing his full power.
The big gimmick, Blade Mode, allows Raiden to chop off pieces of his foes. It’s a rewarding slow-mo flourish that punctuates your kills, and seeing your enemies fall apart exactly where you cut them doesn’t get old. However, the mechanic doesn’t evolve; you attack enemies normally until they get covered in blue static, and then you slice them up. If you can hit a specific area, Raiden gets all of his health back. The limb-severing technology is impressive, but I wanted to see it used in more interesting ways than what amounts to a brief minigame.
Narrative in this genre rarely rates better than absurd, and “Revengeance” is no exception. However, this game bears the “Metal Gear” name, which carries certain expectations. If you have any hopes for this story building on “Metal Gear” lore or giving you a chance to reconnect with characters you care about, you will be disappointed. The new characters are uninteresting and poorly developed, and the old characters are practically nonexistent. The plot doesn’t even address the most basic questions a “Metal Gear” fan would have. The combat, though imperfect, is always in the spotlight.
I’m a longtime “Metal Gear” fan, and “Bayonetta” is one of my favorite games of this generation, so I was elated when Konami and Platinum Games announced their partnership for “Revengeance.” Whether you are hoping for a meaningful expansion of the “Metal Gear” universe or a gratifying action experience, “Revengeance” falls short. Brutalizing cyborgs and hacking giant mechs to pieces is fun, but the restrictive design and lack of precision keep Raiden from capturing the best of both worlds.
‘Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance’
7.75 (out of 10)
PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Konami, Platinum Games/Kojima Productions
ESRB rating: M
Top 10
On the X360
The editors of Game Informer Magazine rank top Xbox 360 games for the month of March:
1. “Tomb Raider,” Square Enix
2. “Dead Space 3,” Electronic Arts
3. “Runner2: Future Legend of Rhythm Alien,” Gaijin
4. “Far Cry 3,” Ubisoft
5. “Crysis 3,” Electronic Arts
6. “Devil May Cry,” Capcom
7. “Star Wars Pinball,” Zen Studios
8. “The Cave,” Sega
9. “Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance,” Konami
10. “Anarchy Reigns,” Sega
Game Informer Magazine
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2. “4 Pics 1 Word”
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McClatchy-Tribune News Service