Friday, March 23, 2018

Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage (Xbox 360, 2010)

Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage
Developed by Koei
Published by Koei Tecmo Games
Released for Xbox 360 (11/2/2010)
Also on PS3


There have been several efforts over the years to make a video game from the popular anime/manga series Fist of the North Star, but most were either disappointing or never left Japan. Koei seems like a good candidate to develop the game, given their track record with the long-running Dynasty Warriors franchise. Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage is incredibly faithful to its source material. If you are a fan of the story and characters you will definitely find something to appreciate here. There's a sizable cast here and all are easily recognizable, the story remains true to the original and the voice acting is quite good in both the English and Japanese variations.

The menus, stage and character select screens are all well composed and attractive. The in-game graphics themselves are a bit of a mixed bag. The characters are well detailed and look nice, though you will tire of beating up the same handful of thugs hundreds of times over. The environments are somewhat detailed, though suffer from some drab design which we'll get into shortly. The gore effects are quite detailed and are pleasing to look at, as you'll constantly see groups of thugs exploding into blood and guts in appropriate Fist of the North Star fashion.

The gameplay in Ken's Rage is basically a beat 'em up, or hack 'n slash as they like to call it these days, but that term feels a bit out of place as you'll be pulverizing your enemies with your fists here. You beat up everybody in a particular area and then move on to the next area where you'll beat up some more dudes. Every now and then the game has some light platforming or random obstacle but it always reverts back to beating up waves of thugs quickly. You have punch, kick and jump attacks in addition to your spirit meter you'll fill up as you hand out beatings. Once you have enough spirit meter you can activate a signature move or go into "spirit aura" mode where your attack is temporarily boosted.

The bulk of Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage lies in the legend and dream modes. There is also a tutorial, challenge and gallery mode option as well. Legend mode follows the story of the original manga and will let you select from Kenshiro, Raoh, Toki, Rei and Mamiya. Dream mode features new "what-if" stories based on the manga characters, and allows you to select from Kenshiro, Raoh, Toki, Rei, Mamiya, Jagi, Thouzer and Shin. Some of these are fun and it's interesting playing from the side of some of the villains. Challenge mode offers two different challenges, one where you'll face off against the guardians of Hokuto and the other where you'll take on the five guardians of Nanto. These feature ranked leaderboards so you can compete with other Xbox 360 players for high scores. The gallery mode will let you look at an encyclopedia which has entries for all of the game's characters, moves, locations, etc. There is also a movie and music gallery which you'll unlock content for as you play. Options allow you to tweak the difficulty, adjust subtitles, change the violence level, turn the life gauge on or off and change the voices between English and Japanese. Overall, the game provides a wealthy amount of content particularly for a game of this nature.

Both legend and dream mode feature cut-scenes before and after each level explaining the plot. These are all quite well done but the amount of them can become a bit overbearing at times. Luckily they can all be skipped with a press of the start button. Dream mode differs a bit in that there are way more characters on the battlefield at once, resulting in some clutter and frame-rate stutters here and there, but nothing game-breaking. Dream mode also offers two-player coop.

There's a good variety of characters to choose from as you play through Ken's Rage, each of them featuring their own expansive skill tree. As you progress through the game, you'll earn spirit points that you'll use to unlock skills, perks and upgrades for your character. Each skill tree is massive and I'd estimate it'd take upwards of 20+ hours to max just one of them out! This is a bit overboard and I really wish your characters would start off with at least some of the skills unlocked. You do start off with a single signature move at least, but all the rest is up to the player to upgrade themselves. It seems more like a cheesy way to try to force replay value out of the game, which really isn't necessary, since if the gameplay is good enough people will keep playing it.

The stage design is probably the weakest aspect of Ken's Rage. The surroundings are all composed of drab browns and grays, which is intentional as the game takes place in a post-apocalyptic world. However, hardly any of the levels are discernible from one another so none of them really stand out. The stages are rarely linear, and while you do have a mini-map that will point out where your objectives are, most levels are filled with branching paths with power-ups laid out to reward exploration. I feel that the length of the levels in general is a bit too long, and some tightening up in the stage design aspect would have benefited the game a lot. In general it will take anywhere from 30-60 minutes just to clear a single scenario, which add ups to a really long game when you take into account how many different stages are offered.

While I enjoyed my time with Ken's Rage, it's not a game I'd recommend to everybody. Hack 'n slash and Fist of the North Star fans should definitely give it a look, but outside of that I couldn't see many others playing it through to the end. It's repetitive nature definitely makes it a good game to play inebriated, where you can just kind of zone out with all of the body parts and blood flying all over the place as you beat down wave after wave of punks. The game is well-designed in the sense that it never froze or glitched on me at any time which is a bit of a rarity these days. The main knock against Ken's Rage is that it's extremely repetitive and very grindy by nature, but if you enjoy these types of games that's not necessarily a bad thing.

Final Verdict: Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage will definitely appeal to fans of the anime/manga and beat 'em up/hack 'n slash junkies, but most others will likely find it far too repetitive.

DLC

Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage would receive seven additional DLC packs, some featuring new characters and missions with others featuring new costumes for existing characters. Overall the grand total is just under $40 if you wish to access all the extra content. This is quite ridiculous and in previous generations this is the type of content would have been included in the base game as a bonus for meeting certain conditions. While it's cool that they added additional characters (Heart & Outlaw) and new costumes for several characters, by the time I'd achieved 100% on the base game I'd honestly had my fill and certainly didn't want to invest any additional money into the game as I'd rather just move on to the sequel (which will be covered later when I get around to snagging a copy). There is no additional gamerscore attached to this DLC so you won't need it to unlock all the of the game's achievements.

Purchase Links:
Buy Ken's Rage (Digital) - Xbox Marketplace
Buy Ken's Rage (Disc) - eBay

Related Links:
Koei Tecmo - Official Site
Ken's Rage - Metacritic
Ken's Rage - GameFAQs
Ken's Rage Achievement Guide - Xbox Achievements
Ken's Rage - True Achievements
CGR Reviews Ken's Rage - YouTube

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