Like I said, yakuza: If the dragon fits the best of Final Fantasy and Persona, but tends to borrow the edge of another title in a franchise that has surprised much : North Star Fist: Paradise lost. The vagaries of the modern step-by-step combat system stagger with a rich and colourful style, and have completely invented their own foundation name. Unlike the infamous display of defeated yakuza, the real-time strategy system allows four party members to attend each meeting. The flexibility of dynamic weapons in any battle also allows you to give advantages or challenges. By simply communicating with a racket, ball, bike or any other device at your disposal, you get a head start in your game.
The support option also includes other party members who cannot help during meetings, as well as a traditional fighter, where a member works with an active team member in the penalty shooting. Like previous messages from the Yakuza, the city is full of secondary demands that need to be dealt with in your spare time. The completion of the various tasks helps to strengthen your party, but you can completely let go of these goals and return to them after the election campaign is over. Karaoke, the mainstay of the series, returns here while a brand new arcade kart game called Dragon Kart is introduced. As you can imagine, it’s practically a Mario Kart inspired race; it’s fun, but you forget everything. If you feel that the active members of your party are not a perfect match, you can rotate them freely so that they are a better match for your approach to the battle.
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The Yakuza belongs to the great artistic style, which formed the core of the series, and to the incredible soundtrack, which accompanies each scenario exceptionally well: How the dragon leads to a multitude of voices above the royal power. A portrait of our bubbling antihero and a demonstration of his incredible range is Kaizi Tang (Person 5, 13 Guards: Aegis Rim), as well as famous names in the industry, including Matthew Mercer (Critical Role, Person 5), Darin de Paul (Spectator, Marvel Spider-Man), Greg Chung (Fantasy VII Final Remake), Brian Bloom (Marvel Spider-Man, Wolfenstein), Elizabeth Maxwell (Persona 5, Astral Chain), Robbie Damond (Persona 5, Bugsnax), Roger Craig Smith (Sonic Hedgehog, above): Legends), Erica Lindbeck (Persona 5, The Last Remake of Fantasy VII) and the legend itself, George Takei (Ohh Moya!) among many, many others.
Yakuza: Like the dragon, it is an incredibly ambitious approach to an existing series. It was a bold risk that SEGA was willing to take, especially for the next generation. However, I can proudly say that The Dragon has proven itself in a category where no one ever thought that a franchise could fit easily. A mix of free adventure and turn-based battles, the flexibility to attack the enemy with a flood of finds in a busy city and of course the ability to face the enemy in different ways. Karaoke. Lots of karaoke. The comic timing of the various decorative elements is brilliant. There were moments when I cried with laughter, but moments of total disorder kept me on the edge of the chair. After years of experiencing this wild series, I would have been incredibly brave to claim the Yakuza: Like the dragon, this is my favorite story, which I can easily tell as part of the glorious history of the franchise.
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