If DC
Comics' movie-makers want to learn a thing or two about translating
Batman and pals to the screen, they could do a lot worse than having a
look at Injustice 2.
Somehow the latest fighting game from Mortal Kombat developer Netherrealm Studios has better plotting and intrigue than any DC film in the last decade. Faint praise after the garish incoherence of Batman v Superman and Suicide Squad, sure, but Injustice 2's compelling story mode conjures just the right amount of silliness and graphic novel grit from its enormous ensemble cast.
It is largely an excuse for superheroes as wide-ranging as Supergirl and Blue Beetle to smack the snot out of each other in one-on-one bouts, of course, but that hasn't stopped it having its share of fun and clever subversions on the usual formula.
Somehow the latest fighting game from Mortal Kombat developer Netherrealm Studios has better plotting and intrigue than any DC film in the last decade. Faint praise after the garish incoherence of Batman v Superman and Suicide Squad, sure, but Injustice 2's compelling story mode conjures just the right amount of silliness and graphic novel grit from its enormous ensemble cast.
It is largely an excuse for superheroes as wide-ranging as Supergirl and Blue Beetle to smack the snot out of each other in one-on-one bouts, of course, but that hasn't stopped it having its share of fun and clever subversions on the usual formula.
The yarn continues the alternate reality of the original Injustice,
with Batman imprisoning a despotic and vengeful Superman in order to
stop him and his meta-human 'Regime' from murdering anyone who so much
as picks up a parking ticket.
There isn't the reality-hopping of the first game, but instead this version of Earth comes under attack from Braniac, an all-powerful being that goes from world to world vacuuming up its cities in his skull-shaped spaceship.
This greater threat leads to an uneasy redux of the Justice League, as Batman, Superman and their scattered and conflicted allies team up against Braniac and a splinter group of villains lead by Gorilla Grodd.
It is all very silly, as you might imagine, but pulled off with a real sense of style. The plot breezes along as everyone smacks each other around a bit, with splendid visuals and a voice cast clearly having a lot of fun.
It wrings a surprising amount out of the well-worn Batman v Superman conflict too, with the latter making a far more interesting villain than his usual Boy Scout heroics.
Comic fans will have a blast, particularly when less famous faces such as Firestorm and Captain Fate get their moment in the limelight.
There isn't the reality-hopping of the first game, but instead this version of Earth comes under attack from Braniac, an all-powerful being that goes from world to world vacuuming up its cities in his skull-shaped spaceship.
This greater threat leads to an uneasy redux of the Justice League, as Batman, Superman and their scattered and conflicted allies team up against Braniac and a splinter group of villains lead by Gorilla Grodd.
It is all very silly, as you might imagine, but pulled off with a real sense of style. The plot breezes along as everyone smacks each other around a bit, with splendid visuals and a voice cast clearly having a lot of fun.
It wrings a surprising amount out of the well-worn Batman v Superman conflict too, with the latter making a far more interesting villain than his usual Boy Scout heroics.
Comic fans will have a blast, particularly when less famous faces such as Firestorm and Captain Fate get their moment in the limelight.
Most
importantly it serves as a terrific introduction to Injustice's fighting
mechanics by exposing you to a plethora of characters throughout its
five hour running time. All the looks and fancy story would be worth
nothing if the game underpinning it wasn't any good.
And Injustice 2 is an excellent fighting game. It is by far the most technically adept game Netherrealm has developed and the most accessible, content-complete brawler on console.
It is a further enhancement of the Mortal Kombat X engine: all exuberant attacks, brutal supermoves and stages that crackle with detail and opportunity for environmental attacks. You really haven't lived until you've drop-kicked Superman into a giant carving of his own face.
It isn't as technically proficient or complex as Street Fighter, which remains the king of competitive fighting, but Injustice 2's goals are altogether different. It prefers to keep things friendlier to newcomers, with combos and special moves sharing similar button inputs across the roster.
There is plenty of nuance there, and mastery of a particular character still takes time, but it allows casual players to flit between heroes and still have fun and find success.
And Injustice 2 is an excellent fighting game. It is by far the most technically adept game Netherrealm has developed and the most accessible, content-complete brawler on console.
It is a further enhancement of the Mortal Kombat X engine: all exuberant attacks, brutal supermoves and stages that crackle with detail and opportunity for environmental attacks. You really haven't lived until you've drop-kicked Superman into a giant carving of his own face.
It isn't as technically proficient or complex as Street Fighter, which remains the king of competitive fighting, but Injustice 2's goals are altogether different. It prefers to keep things friendlier to newcomers, with combos and special moves sharing similar button inputs across the roster.
There is plenty of nuance there, and mastery of a particular character still takes time, but it allows casual players to flit between heroes and still have fun and find success.
Injustice
2 is the perfect pick-up-and-play fighter, then, but that doesn't mean
it lacks for technicality or skill. And brilliantly, it makes every
effort to open up the fighting game lexicon for its players. Its
tutorials spell out the rules for burn meters and bounce cancels, combos
and crossovers, and makes them easy to execute but hard to master.
The burn meter, for example, allows you to bolster special moves with an extra combo hit (or two) by simply squeezing R2 at the right time. You can also spend meter energy on dodges and air-escapes. Fill it and you can pull off your characters super move by pulling both triggers.
These are brilliantly excessive shows of force: Supergirl takes her foe for a trip round the sun before hurling them back to Earth in a cluster of flaming meteors, The Flash whizzes back in time to smack his foe off the hide of a T-Rex.
Ease of input doesn't mean easy, however, with each character made unique and given move sets and special abilities suited to their character. Harley is nippy and loaded with ranged pistol shots, Grodd is a lumbering powerhouse, Batman a gadget-laden all-rounder.
Once you have that control down, you are free to move onto tactics for each hero, your meter management and how to counter your opponent.
Like any fighting game, Injustice is largely about judging distance and combinations and how to implement your game plan and adapt when it all goes south. Unlike many fighting games, Injustice is keen to strip down and explain the technicalities.
With more fluidity and variation than in previous Netherrealm games, too, this is a brawler that knows how to deliver a dust-up. And is keen to teach its players how to do so aswell.
The burn meter, for example, allows you to bolster special moves with an extra combo hit (or two) by simply squeezing R2 at the right time. You can also spend meter energy on dodges and air-escapes. Fill it and you can pull off your characters super move by pulling both triggers.
These are brilliantly excessive shows of force: Supergirl takes her foe for a trip round the sun before hurling them back to Earth in a cluster of flaming meteors, The Flash whizzes back in time to smack his foe off the hide of a T-Rex.
Ease of input doesn't mean easy, however, with each character made unique and given move sets and special abilities suited to their character. Harley is nippy and loaded with ranged pistol shots, Grodd is a lumbering powerhouse, Batman a gadget-laden all-rounder.
Once you have that control down, you are free to move onto tactics for each hero, your meter management and how to counter your opponent.
Like any fighting game, Injustice is largely about judging distance and combinations and how to implement your game plan and adapt when it all goes south. Unlike many fighting games, Injustice is keen to strip down and explain the technicalities.
With more fluidity and variation than in previous Netherrealm games, too, this is a brawler that knows how to deliver a dust-up. And is keen to teach its players how to do so aswell.
It also
provides a quite bewildering array of options to get into a scrap. Solo
players are particularly well served, with that story mode and the
'Multiverse'; an ever-changing collection of fights and daily
challenges.
Playing through the story or completing missions in the Multiverse showers you with coins and random loot boxes that feed into a 'gear' system, allowing you to upgrade individual characters with buffs and cosmetic upgrades.
You can then take these rewards into battle online.
The gear system arguably strips some of the purity of Injustice 2's multiplayer brawling, which is comfortably good enough to get by without such frippery. Particularly when you can come up against players with a lot more time to grind their way to the best kit.
There is, however, a 'competitive' mode, which disables gear for a more straightforward scrap. I could have done without the gear system, but can see the appeal and reach for longevity it creates. And, honestly, the alternative costumes and shaders are so beautifully designed, you could find yourself tumbling down a rabbit hole trying to unlock spiffy new hats for The Joker.
This is another flourish of a fighting game that is big on style. There is a saunter and character to its roster, to its stages that fizz and crumble under the weight of battle, it is kinetic and fun and easy to get into.
And it might just be your new favourite fighting game... even if you have never played one before.
Playing through the story or completing missions in the Multiverse showers you with coins and random loot boxes that feed into a 'gear' system, allowing you to upgrade individual characters with buffs and cosmetic upgrades.
You can then take these rewards into battle online.
The gear system arguably strips some of the purity of Injustice 2's multiplayer brawling, which is comfortably good enough to get by without such frippery. Particularly when you can come up against players with a lot more time to grind their way to the best kit.
There is, however, a 'competitive' mode, which disables gear for a more straightforward scrap. I could have done without the gear system, but can see the appeal and reach for longevity it creates. And, honestly, the alternative costumes and shaders are so beautifully designed, you could find yourself tumbling down a rabbit hole trying to unlock spiffy new hats for The Joker.
This is another flourish of a fighting game that is big on style. There is a saunter and character to its roster, to its stages that fizz and crumble under the weight of battle, it is kinetic and fun and easy to get into.
And it might just be your new favourite fighting game... even if you have never played one before.
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