There’s no real combos and it’s rudimentary even by hack ‘n’ slash standards. There’s a button for normal attacks, a button for strong attacks, a button to breath fire, a button for a defensive energy blast, a way to grab (which is difficult to pull off) and a way to charge. Gameplay is incredibly basic, even by Godzilla game standards. The main mode of Godzilla is known as God of Destruction, which allows players to rampage through cities as Godzilla. Of course, that would be assuming that there’s a deep gameplay behind the story which there isn’t. While it’s not like anybody follows the franchise for its gripping story, it would have been nice to build more of a plot around the events. Now mankind must once again defend against this menacing beast - but is it man who’s the true beast? It’s clearly the flimsiest set up imaginable for explaining why there are giant monsters rampaging around and the basic plot of at least seventy Godzilla films. While that alone is devastating, the plot literally doesn’t amount to more than Godzilla first appearing sixty years ago and laying waste to a city before going into seclusion and appearing again. So let’s get this out of the way first much like the 2014 film, Godzilla sadly does not include Bryan Cranston. Yeah, this is going to end about as well as Tokyo after a thorough Godzilla stomping. Instead of going back to the drawing board for the current-gen debut of the king, they’re drawing off the putrid Godzilla Generations for some reason. Yet since Godzilla first debuted in game format in 1983 on Commodore 64, only one halfway decent game has come along - Godzilla: Destroy All Monsters Melee - and it has aged quickly and poorly. This is a franchise centered around a gigantic lizard monster destroying towns and fighting other gigantic monsters it’s the epitome of what a video game should be. It’s not for lack of trying - there’s been nearly fifty games that include the officially licensed Toho beast. Get this game now.Why can’t Godzilla get a good game? The giant lizard has been around for over fifty years and throughout the entire existence of video games, yet not a single worthy game has been released. It's always hair raising going up against a colossal 100M Kaiju when you're half their size!.
#Godzilla ps4 godzilla 2014 ps3#
Ive got the platinum trophy for the PS3 version & now playing thru the ps4 one but it's kicking my butt. Well worth the cost (pretty cheap now) and highly recommended for all tokusatsu nerd gamers. If you like the gameplay, well, that's a good thing. but there's not much variety to the formula. You can only collect Kaiju DNA after defeating them in battle, and it's pretty scarce so if you want to level-up G and his posse of Kaiju, there's a fair bit of grinding here.
#Godzilla ps4 godzilla 2014 upgrade#
Evolution mode lets you upgrade your Kaiju, but at a cost. If you like your gahsapon, you're in for a treat. Diorama mode is fun where you get to arrange miniature toys of the monsters in mini city-scapes and take pics. One great game mechanic is that G always starts out at 50M, and the more you destroy cities, army troops, even battle Kaiju, the more G grows until you get over 100M and come back as burning Godzilla to face off against the 2014 legendary beast himself. Multiple pathways mean you rarely travel the same places in repeat play throughs, unless you're a sucker for punishment and go the hard routes every time (or wuss out and go the easy routes instead). The addition of HD cutscenes when encountering the Kaiju on PS4 is awesome! This game really shines in co-op too, but the solo campaign is where the meat is at. The graphics are slightly upscaled, but not very noticeable. this is the definitive version of this game, the PS3 version falling short with a smaller roster of kaijus (which are actually playable in king of Kaiju mode for ps4, whereas only then big G is selectable in the ps3 offering) so if you want ALL the Kaiju, and want to play as them and be the bad guy instead, you're only option is the ps4 version.