I'm more than happy with this game. I will upload some videos soon in my YouTube channel Gaming Agents. Thank you Smyth's Toys.
I'm more than happy with this game. I will upload some videos soon in my YouTube channel Gaming Agents. Thank you Smyth's Toys.
The latter is where One Piece: World Seeker 's DNA traces back to. While not officially an Unlimited game by title, World Seeker feels like a combination of forward progress, lessons learned, and an attempt to fit more in with what big, explorative video games look like today.
Involvement of One Piece talent from other mediums really shines through; Jumping and gliding around with Luffy's rubber powers is a hoot; Surprising degree of polish and production value
Combat can feel stiff and limiting; especially in early hours; Limited voice acting betrays otherwise big production; Other Strawhats stuck in supporting roles can be a drag
In spite of its uninviting name, Prison Island is absolutely beautiful, with lush greenery in almost every frame accentuated by perpetually clear blue skies and crystalline formations jutting out of the Earth.
Super Beautiful Visuals; Charming Characters; Intriguing Story
Mildly Janky Controls; Not Enough Enemy Diversity; Underwhelming Combat
You're Monkey D. Luffy, you're the good guy, you're the one who will sucker-punch your enemies in ways that will make them feel ashamed that they ever underestimated you. You get to move around like him, talk like him, and even fight like him, and your old friends are there to help, making this...
An original story that blends well with the One Piece mythos; Moving around the environment using Luffy's Gum Gum Rocket technique; Cutesy graphics; Fluid animation; A massive map to explore
Horrible UI; The open world seems deserted most of the times; Forgettable side characters
One Piece fans have been waiting forever for that one video game that does justice to the exceedingly popular Japanese manga. True, there have been interesting adventures, touching stories, and other attempts over the years which were okay, however, nobody has ever made a high-quality and definitive...
One Piece: World Seeker is lacking in so many areas. It may be lovely to look at, but an overall shallow and repetitive experience take away any semblance of joy fans are likely to find.
Very good looking world; Impressive cutscenes; Great range of powers to unlock
Feels like a world waiting for a game; Overt objectification of female characters is gross
Videogaming fans of One Piece have had a fairly eventful start to 2019: A large chunk of One Piece characters showed up in February's Jump Force , and now One Piece: World Seeker has released, which focuses solely on the One Piece franchise.
Positives + Good amount of fan service + Plenty of content
Negatives - Bland; repetitive structure - Not much for non-fans
One Piece: World Seeker sees you once again thrust into the sandals of Monkey D. Luffy as you take on the Navy and their evil cohorts, this time taking you to Prison Island where, with some help from the locals, you have to find the rest of your crew while putting the smackdown on plenty of Marines...
Fantastic looking open world; Engaging narrative; Good drip feed of new abilities; Fantastic looking open world; Engaging narrative; Good drip feed of new abilities
World feels lifeless; Too many dull quests; Combat doesn't flow
A loving piece of fan service that looks and sounds just like the anime, but unfortunately it plays like a bad Xbox 360 era open world game.
The graphics are great and One Piece fans will love the attention to detail and the all-new story by Eiichiro Oda
One note (and one button) combat is extremely repetitive, with some nasty difficulty spikes; Mission design lacks variety and stealth is extremely basic; Poor pacing and long load times
One Piece debuted back in 1997 in manga form before getting its own anime series in 1999 and still continues to be one of the most successful Japanese
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