Travis Strikes Again: No More Heroes Review Almost nine years for a follow-up toNo More Heroes 2: Desperate Struggleis alongtime to wait. Reference the speaks concerning R4 3DS ,A major Nintendo3DS investigating staff.Suda51, the crazy mind behind the No More Heroes franchise, is universally renowned for the zany, outrageously violent and fourth wall breaking titles that stood out from the cutesy crowd on Wii. So it was a great surprise to see the man himself announce a fresh No More Heroes game a couple of years ago when the Switch was revealed to the world. Its a shame then that a nine-year wait is made even worse when the end product proves to be a bit of a disappointment. Travis Strikes Again is, for a better term, rather striking. Opening with an impressive and colourful cutscene that catapults the signature Suda51 tone into your eyeballs, it holds promise. Taking control of the sharp-tongued and foul-mouth Travis Touchdown again, an unlikely alliance with Bad Man (you killed his daughter a few years back) plays out. Travis, along with Bad Man and Jeane your sparkly anime pet cat reside in a beaten up old trailer working together to gather and beat video games for the extra immersive console: the Death Drive Mk II. Collecting all of these Death balls and the player gets granted one wish.
Collect coins to nab some great in-game indie tees It seems to be a brilliant idea of videogame inception off the bat, but within a couple of hours, the product of Suda 51 desperately trying to show off some weak and unnecessarily show-horned collaborations becomes more embarrassing than impressive. The breaking of the fourth wall makes a lazy return, but its been done before; you find yourself eye rolling more that you crack a smile. Its like someone telling the same joke over and over but starting with the punch line. Its tedious and uncomfortably awkward at the best of times.