![]() There are a few new assassination missions and side-jobs, but they're nothing special. The world is dreary and empty there are a few collectibles you can find, but they're near worthless, and searching for them is one of the most boring experiences I've ever had in a game. You can earn money in three ways: there are trash cans throughout the world you can bash with your bike to find small amounts of cash (and some t-shirts), but they're limited and not useful or you can take "side-jobs" (generally awful minigames) to earn decent amounts of cash and unlock assassin side missions, which have you killing enemies to reach a certain objective for the largest amounts of cash.Ä«etween doing these missions (most of which are boring), you have to drive around the blank, boring town of Santa Destroy on your bike. After killing the assassin above you, you go back to your hotel in the town of Santa Destroy, and you're blessed with the tedium of grinding out money to pay for upgrades and the next ranking fight. One of the worst facets of the original game was the forced open-world gameplay. The issue is the application of that combat. The combat controls are fine, and fighting generally feels satisfying, with your enemies exploding into fountains of blood and coins after you pull your finishers. You have to swing the PS3 controller up and down to recharge your battery, which isn't as analogous to masturbation as the Move/Wii controller control scheme is, but it still works. ![]() This works well most of the time, though it doesn't feel as satisfying as swinging the controller, but that's not really an issue. The finisher, instead of being activated through swinging a controller, is activated by moving the right analog stick in the indicated direction. The Dualshock/Sixaxis controls are alright, on the whole. There are a few other places that were designed with motion controls in mind, but we'll get to those later. It's your basic character action gameplay, though you hit a button to swing your sword, and you swing the controller in a direction to pull off a finisher or do a wrestling move. The Move control scheme is basically the same as the Wii version's, and the Wii version had alright controls. ![]() Like No More Heroes 2, Heroes' Paradise has the option to play with your motion controller (the Move in this case) or the traditional PS3 controller. Once you start playing the game, it all starts.falling apart. ![]()
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