Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Army Corps of Hell

Army Corps of Hell certainly surprised me. Perhaps it had been the straight out of the early 1980s rock aesthetic, perhaps it had been the simplicity of the whole affair, on the other hand wasn't expecting much of the game. The fact is, if you're able to work through the screaming hair metal soundtrack (I am a metal fan myself, but this wasn't flavored to my particular taste), there exists a pretty fun little game as Cheap GW2 Gold in here.The idea is simple: you might be a lord in the dead, and also you Genuinely wish to dominate everything. To do this, you have to summon a military of goblin minions who come in three flavors: melee, spearmen and spellcasters. Each level is a number of combat arenas filled up with traps and enemies, that you must make judicious usage of your minions to kill.Combat plays out just like Overlord, in that you end up picking the minion you would like to mail out, and have them swarm your target. Get enough minions with an enemy and you may you can keep them combine their strength for the kill move.
Combine this having a form of rock/paper/scissors mechanic against the various enemy types, plus you've got your game.If you have a minion type selected, you can even call your army into formation, which differs per minion. If you need to go with a good space between traps, you'll get in touch with your spearmen, and collapse in to a narrow formation. Again, it is relatively simple, however it keeps you, on your toes.Enemies you kill drop various components for your game's crafting system, which allows you to manufacture new gear for your minions and also various consumables to make use of when it's in a guide. While a few fair amount of options here, it's presented in an exceedingly linear fashion, so forcing one to grind out ingredients for brand new gear is almost a let-down.Like all new system launches, you might have your great number of games that appear to be just up-rezzed games from your prior system, and Army Corps of Hell definitely is apparently within this camp. Aside from a number of tacked-on rear known as functions, nothing over it, graphics included, couldn't be accomplished for the Runescape Gold PSP.There is local co-op play available, but due to my distinct lack of a PS Vita-owning co-op partner, I'm only in a position to cover the solo area of the game, hence its appearance as a Beyond Co-Op review. If I will get some co-op in, hopefully I'll come back to this review and get it done up proper. As is, it's certainly a solid B-tier title for your Vita while you anxiously await more game announcements.

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