
You have some type of health left in order to pull it off. With Rage Art players can activate a super with their character giving a high damage move that could end it all. If you are familiar with Street Fighter of course Harada had to add a SF essence from his best friend Ono and of course because of Akuma presence in the game. When your health is low your character will glow red and so will your health bar giving a boost. Rage mode is back from Tekken 6 but this time a little different since it will not have a huge amount of damage inflicted to your opponent. More cool additions that blew me away is the old and new battle mechanics. When I noticed it, I screamed for joy because that was a pure annoyance in Tekken Tag Tournament 2. During a combo a bound can be initiated depending on the input and character move. So auto bounding and back rolls are no longer present. Tekken 7 takes from Tekken Revolution’s combo system, which made. Bounds and the infamous juggles are still present in Tekken 7, but not as a gimmick feature. Tekken Tag Tournament 2 was a fun game during its release week, but quickly shed me away from the title because of the cheesy bounding that was added.

With each character you can literally see the fine detail in this full 3D fighter, and the special treat is seeing how a Street Fighter Character is brought to life in it.

Tekken 7 features the award-winning Unreal Engine 4 giving the game a robust amount of development features such as dynamic weather, deconstruction of the environment, and graphical aesthetics like none before in the franchise. At Microsoft’s press conference it looked beyond beautiful, but to see the graphics and to feel physics of what Harada has worked on was pure joy as a Tekken Fan. Starting off I could not help but to realize how beautiful this game looked in person. For starters it was a huge surprise to see Tekken 7 within Microsoft’s E3 2016 Press Conference.ĭuring E3 the crew of G Style Gaming got a chance to hit up Bandai Namco to get our hands finally on Tekken 7, and of course talk mad trash to each other on who will receive an L to take back to NYC. Bandai Namco’s E3 presence was beyond strong this year, satisfying any hyped Otaku gamer who yearns for localization of Japanese titles.
