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Forums - Nintendo Discussion - To prove that I am mostly right, I will buy How to Train your Dragon 2 Wii U version for one of you- Veknoid will take the Third party challenge!

 

If I bought it for you, would you play it for 5-10 hours?

Yes 40 35.40%
 
No, not even for free 41 36.28%
 
Maybe, but just to help y... 19 16.81%
 
See results or post below. 12 10.62%
 
Total:112

one is taking one for the team and the other is putting his money where his mouth is.
im so proud of u guys...



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I'm in the US and I'll do it.



what is the point?



My grammar errors are justified by the fact that I am a brazilian living in Brazil. I am also very stupid.

if you send me the game ill do it. im from south america.



spurgeonryan said:
WagnerPaiva said:
what is the point?


Prove I have good taste.

 


With all due respect, I have seen a bunch of reviews and the game looks awful man =/



My grammar errors are justified by the fact that I am a brazilian living in Brazil. I am also very stupid.

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*Goes to youtube*

*Clicks on a random Let's play video*

*Sees a dragon going through radiactive green rings, Superman 64 style*

Uh-oh...

 

<- Ryan                                     Veknoid->



Veknoid_Outcast said:
MoHasanie said:
Good luck Veknoid! Are you sure you're up for the challenge though? The reviews for that game were really bad... :S



Just try not to throw up while playing, Vek!



                
       ---Member of the official Squeezol Fanclub---

"I meant what I said and I said what I meant. An elephant's faithful one-hundred percent."

It took me a lot longer than I expected, but I finally played How to Train Your Dragon 2 for Wii U, with a little co-op help from my wife.

Here's the review, as promised!

 

Game: How To Train Your Dragon 2
Platform: Wii U
Developer: Torus Games
Release date: June 2014

Video game players have been trained, by experience or by reputation, to treat games based on other forms of entertainment, most famously movies, with a healthy dose of skepticism. More often than not, these tie-in games, content with simply leveraging the popularity of their source material, demonstrate a disappointing lack of creative energy. Such is the case with How to Train Your Dragon 2, a relatively inoffensive game that believes, wrongly, that a licensed property is enough to keep a mediocre game afloat.

Those wary of spoilers need not worry. Although How to Train Your Dragon 2 shares the title and characters of the DreamWorks' animated movie, it's largely plotless. Instead of tracking the plot lines of the movie, which, by the way, could have resulted in some terrific on-rails shooting segments, the developers at Torus Games opted for a fixed location -- the Viking island of Berk -- and a series of mini-games.

Unfortunately, these mini-games, which make up the main gaming experience of How to Train Your Dragon 2, aren't very interesting or much fun. They consist mainly of Superman 64-style fly-through-the-floating ring races, shooting galleries, and sheep collecting challenges. The shooting gallery mini-game, which functions like a simplified version of Virtua Cop, is a nice diversion, but in general the mini-games are boring, buggy, and lacking in variety.

Luckily, players can avoid the mini-games entirely, opting instead to explore Berk at their own leisure. It's here where How to Train Your Dragon 2 moves toward achieving something special. Hidden around the island are 50 tokens for each dragon; collecting them all will unlock special abilities. There's also plenty of dragon perches, mountains, and caves to explore, and even some beautiful vistas to view, despite the game's muddy, GameCube-era graphics.

The best part of How to Train Your Dragon 2 on Wii U, sadly, has been completely unadvertised by Torus Games. It's a slick multi-player mode that allows a second player to join in at any point during the game. This second player, riding a different dragon, can explore Berk, participate in races and challenges, and partake in three multiplayer-specific mini-games. Since the game doesn't support the Pro Controller, the second player is required to use a Wii Remote with limited controls, but, impressively, there is no split screen -- one player gets the TV to him or herself and the other uses the GamePad.

Despite this neat multi-player mode, How to Train Your Dragon 2 never breaks free from Torus' lack of ambition. The mini-games are tedious and prone to bugs; Berk, while fun to explore, is too small to sustain investigation for long; and the game's graphics and physics seem generations old. There's some fun to be had, but not for long, and not in large quantities.




Wow, that's actually cool that you did that.



VO delivered!



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