![]() The Warriors franchise is, in a way, a benchmark for each console generation. It’s a silly bit of fluff that exists to bring all of these different characters together, and really, that’s all it needs to be. ![]() The pretense of bringing together all these characters, which include Ninja Gaiden’s Ryu and Bladestorm's Joan of Arc in the Ultimate release, is pretty goofy – but that’s fine. There are even Fire Emblem adjacent support conversations between each of the 191 (!) playable characters. It’s a bunch of goofy fan service, and if you’re in the market for that, it’s pretty solid. There are some stylish cutscenes and fun bits of dialogue, but they’re mostly there to show off characters chatting with each other who ordinarily wouldn’t. Orochi 4’s story isn’t necessarily the selling point of this thing. Lu Bu also becomes a demon king, because yeah, that tracks. ![]() There’s magical jewelry, Norse gods, and every possible Dynasty Warriors, Samurai Warriors, and Warriors: Legends of Troy character you can think of. There’s very little in the way of exposition up front, with the basic pretense of the game being that Zeus is bringing a bunch of different time periods together for… reasons. Orochi 4 wastes no time in getting to the absolute bonkers craziness that comes with mashing together the different strains of Warriors. ![]()
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