War Of The Monsters 2 Player
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Contents PlotIn a strange twist of fate, the very monsters who had threatened to lay waste to our planet had actually saved it from annihilation. Destroying both each other and the alien menace in their ferocious War of the Monsters, they had left the world damaged, but alive. For several decades there was peace: the people everywhere breathed a collective sigh of relief and began to rebuild.Years have passed it all changed. All across the globe, the mutations continued. It turns out that the crashing saucer that had brought Cerebulon to his doom had also blanketed the atmosphere with leaking alien fuel. With the extraterrestrial mutagen now airborne, chaos broke loose in every corner of the globe: the monsters, long thought to be dead, now revived with even greater strength than before.
An entire new generation of monsters rose by their side, and worse yet, a familiar evil began to stir again for vengeance. The second War of the Monsters had begun.MonstersThere are 26 playable monsters such as:Veteran Monsters TogeraA gargantuan dinosaur said to be the last of his kind that survived extinction by hibernating beneath the ocean.Spending untold centuries in hibernation at the bottom of the Pacific ocean, Togera was awoken by leaking fuel from one of the disabled UFOs which sunk to the depths, in the proximity of the slumbering beast.Togera is believed to be a descendant of the gigantic dinosaurs that once roamed the earth millions of years ago. Now it is possibly the last of it's species. Survival drives it to fight savagely-morphing it's body to protrude deadly 'bone' spikes and spitting deadly streams of radiactive energyCongar Preytor Robo-47 Agamo Ultra V Magmo Kineticlops RaptrosThe last specimen of the Dragon species, reawaken from hibernation by the UFO radioactive fuel.
War of the Monsters | |
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Developer(s) | Incognito Entertainment |
Publisher(s) |
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Designer(s) | Eric Simonich |
Composer(s) | Chuck E. Myers Brady Ellis |
Platform(s) | PlayStation 2, PlayStation Network, PlayStation 4 |
Release | PlayStation 2
PlayStation 4
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Genre(s) | Action, fighting |
War of the Monsters is a 3Dfighting game for the PlayStation 2 developed by Incognito Entertainment and published by Sony Computer Entertainment. The game was released on January 14, 2003 in North America and April 17, 2003 in Europe. It was later released in Japan on March 25, 2004.
The game is set in the aftermath of an alien invasion of Earth where their hazardous fuels have spawned giant monsters that battle one another in city environments. The game pays homage to Kaiju and 1950s science fiction films.
Gameplay[edit]
In War of the Monsters, players take the roles of large monsters in city environments. The game plays as a fighting game yet works differently from the traditional one-on-one structured rounds. Instead, fights can include up to 4 players in a four-way simultaneous fighting structure. The camera is in third person perspective, allowing the player to focus solely on their character.[1]
Monsters have two status bars in each game, health and stamina. Like the standard fighting game formula, every time a monster takes damage, their overall Health bar drops until it is completely depleted, resulting in player defeat. Stamina determines how much energy a monster can attack with.[2] The bar drops if a monster picks up another foe or performs a ranged attack. If the bar is full, a monster can perform special attacks, whereas if the bar is completely drained, they become temporarily unable to use basic attacks (they can still throw and attack with items however, which adds energy to the bar and helps an empty bar recover faster).[3]
Also unlike most fighting games, players are allowed to roam freely within the city area, which allows climbing of jumping from buildings and cliffs. Monsters can use the environment to deal out damage to their foes by making weapons of various objects found within the city, such as vehicles and rubble as projectiles, steel girders and stone columns as clubs and radio antennae as a spear to impale others, temporarily stunning them.[4] There are also some environment pick-ups, which can increase health or stamina, appearing as green or blue orbs and floating radioactive signs.[5] Buildings can be destroyed if a monster directly attacks or is thrown into it. In some cities, taller buildings can topple over sideways that can crush other monsters, killing them instantly.In the Adventure mode, along with a series of set fights with other monsters, boss battles are also present. They are much larger than the standard playable monsters and required certain strategies to defeat. 'Tokens' can also be earned through Adventure mode, which can be spent at the 'Unlocks' shop to unlock more cities, monsters, and monster skins. And you also can unlock mini-games like dodge ball or city destruction.[6]
Multiplayer options allow two players via split-screen, which can be set to merge into one screen when both players are close enough to fit on the same screen.[7]
Plot[edit]
The plot is set in the 1950s where a fleet of alien flying saucer warships invade the Earth, causing massive damage. The scientists of the world's nations manage to create a series of secret weapons, which, when activated, let loose shock waves that short-circuit the saucers and cause them to crash. Unfortunately, each flying saucer is fueled by a green radioactive liquid, which leaks out from destroyed crafts as they crash. Through this, the fuel infects creatures, humans, and robots, creating a war between the monsters. The player acts as one of these monsters and battles against the rest in fictional cities across the globe and the remaining UFOs.
The story mode of the game starts out in Midtown Park where a giant gorilla called Congar defeats a wave of military forces but is fought and defeated by the lead monster.
In Gambler's Gulch, the lead monster also defeats the reptilian beast, Togera. After Togera's defeat, a military class mech called Robo-47 and the military show up and attack the lead monster but are defeated as well. At a military base at Rosedale Canyon, the lead monster is confronted by a horde of irradiated giant ants and a mega robot, Goliath Prime. Prime and the ants are all defeated.
In Metro City, the military decide to test their new weapon, Mecha-Congar, on the giant mantis Preytor, who was attacking the city. Before they could fight the lead monster appears and defeats them both. The lead monster then travels to Century Airfield and defeats twin Raptros dragons.
Then, at the Atomic Island power plant, the lead monster defeats a swarm of Kineticlops, living electrical monsters, by causing a nuclear meltdown. In the resulting ruins, the lead monster must battle a large, three headed plant creature called Vegon.Two Robo-47s stop a UFO attack in scenic Baytown and then try to slay the lead monster. Both are repelled and beaten.In the Pacific island of Club Caldera, the rock monsters Magmo and Agamo fight each other with the lead monster caught in the middle. Both are beaten.
After defeating two Ultra V robots at 'Tsunopolis', the lead monster is abducted by a UFO that takes it back to the mothership. There the lead monster has to fend off three Zorgulons before being abducted once more when the mothership explodes, causing the UFO to crash into the North American city of Capitol. There, the alien leader Cerebulon attacks in a multi-layered tripod battle suit. After Cerebulon is defeated, the lead monster victor watches as the last part of Cerebulon, a small timid insect like creature flees. A short movie is shown about the monster's origin depending on who the player chooses. The only exceptions are Raptros the dragon and Zorgulon the alien creature who has their own ending with roar in victory.
Reception[edit]
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War of the Monsters received 'generally favorable reviews' according to video game review aggregatorMetacritic.[8] In Japan, Famitsu gave it a score of three sevens and one six for a total of 27 out of 40.[12]
Most reviewers praised the game's style and monster roster, being a homage to classic monster movies. IGN stated that 'the game draws its inspiration from movies like The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms, King Kong, and Godzilla, the characters immediately appear to be Inspired by from the great Ray Harryhausen', going on to say 'each of the game's 10 gigantic beasts are as fun to play as they are to look at'[19] while GameSpot said 'a slick presentation gives the game the style of an old drive-in movie or news telecast, and it really works well to accentuate the game's retro theme and characters.'[16]
GameSpy was equally impressed, noting the destructible environments, that 'WotM captures the joy of destruction more so than any game I've ever played. Did you think knocking over buildings was fun in Rampage? It's ten.. no, twelvety times better in WotM'.[17]Game Informer, however, complained about certain aspects of gameplay, that 'the unblockable attacks are just downright unfair' and that 'the lazy camera produces numerous blind spots throughout a battle'.[13]Game Revolution noted AI issues, that 'the monsters routinely demonstrate a strong sense of self-preservation', which they called 'extremely frustrating behavior'.[15]
See also[edit]
- King of the Monsters, an earlier series of games with a similar plotline
- Rampage, an earlier series with similar monsters
References[edit]
- ^Sony Computer Entertainment, ed. (2003). War of the Monsters instruction manual. Sony Computer Entertainment. pp. 6–7.
- ^Sony Computer Entertainment, ed. (2003). War of the Monsters instruction manual. Sony Computer Entertainment. p. 7.
- ^Sony Computer Entertainment, ed. (2003). War of the Monsters instruction manual. Sony Computer Entertainment. p. 10.
- ^Sony Computer Entertainment, ed. (2003). War of the Monsters instruction manual. Sony Computer Entertainment. p. 11.
- ^Sony Computer Entertainment, ed. (2003). War of the Monsters instruction manual. Sony Computer Entertainment. p. 12.
- ^Sony Computer Entertainment, ed. (2003). War of the Monsters instruction manual. Sony Computer Entertainment. p. 4.
- ^Sony Computer Entertainment, ed. (2003). War of the Monsters instruction manual. Sony Computer Entertainment. p. 5.
- ^ ab'War of the Monsters for PlayStation 2 Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^T.J. Deci. 'War of the Monsters - Review'. AllGame. All Media Network. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^EGM staff (February 2003). 'War of the Monsters'. Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 163. Ziff Davis. p. 142. Archived from the original on June 24, 2004. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^Tom Bramwell (April 10, 2003). 'War of the Monsters Review'. Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^ ab'怪獣大激戦'. Famitsu (in Japanese). Vol. 798. Enterbrain. April 2, 2004.
- ^ abChet Barber (February 2003). 'War of the Monsters'. Game Informer. No. 118. GameStop. p. 96. Archived from the original on February 27, 2004. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^Fennec Fox (January 29, 2003). 'War of the Monsters Review for PS2 on GamePro.com'. GamePro. IDG Entertainment. Archived from the original on February 9, 2005. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^ abG-Wok (February 2003). 'War of the Monsters Review'. Game Revolution. CraveOnline. Archived from the original on September 29, 2015. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^ abGreg Kasavin (January 15, 2003). 'War of the Monsters Review'. GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^ abBenjamin Turner (January 14, 2003). 'GameSpy: War of the Monsters'. GameSpy. IGN Entertainment. Retrieved January 31, 2008.
- ^Louis Bedigian (January 20, 2003). 'War of the Monsters - PS2 - Review'. GameZone. Archived from the original on October 5, 2008. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^ abJeremy Dunham (January 9, 2003). 'War of the Monsters'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^John Davison (January 2003). 'War of the Monsters'. Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine. Ziff Davis. p. 118. Archived from the original on June 19, 2004. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^Noah Robischon (January 17, 2003). ''Monsters' Inc. (War of the Monsters Review)'. Entertainment Weekly. No. 691. Time Inc. p. 86. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
- ^Alex Porter (January 14, 2003). 'War of the Monsters'. Maxim. Biglari Holdings. Archived from the original on February 1, 2003. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
External links[edit]
- War of the Monsters at MobyGames