![]() ![]() There’s the typical selection of survival, time attack, and arcade mode with so many fighters, they’re only afforded a storyline via an ending cutscene, and the plot will be entirely nebulous if you haven’t been following the recent Tekken entries closely (though it still offers more than the wholly storyless TTT). It’s a good thing that the online play is so enthralling, because there isn't a whole lot to do in the single-player modes. If the included music isn’t your speed, you can swap it out with the new Tekken Tunes feature-but quite honestly, you shouldn’t have a reason to. The hard-driving rhythms and pounding drum ‘n’ bass beats in some of the stage themes will have you so amped for the fight, you might feel like you’re actually about to spar. You know that awesome African safari stage from Super Street Fighter IV, with the amazingly catchy melody? Imagine if every other stage had such a mesmeric, enthralling score, and you’ve got TTT2’s soundtrack in a nutshell. If any one aspect deserves a special shout-out, it’s TTT2’s music, which is primarily phenomenal. All of your old favorites return in fine form the fighters all have a unique grace and movement to them that will entrance onlookers and makes controlling them a treat. The expansive roster is practically a who’s-who of the entire series, with over 50 characters and counting, thanks to free day one DLC. Through some technological wizardry, Namco Bandai has managed to squeeze more graphical power out of the current generation, producing visuals that are even cleaner than those in Tekken 6. Having the split-second tactical option to switch between your pugilists during a particularly juicy combo, or frantically trying to tag out your fighter as their health bar continuously dwindles, gives the moment-to-moment gameplay a frenzied urgency that’s as nerve-wracking as it is fun. But the real fun is in the tag battles, which end when any one fighter gets KO'd. If one fighter is all you need, TTT2 will oblige you, buffing your lone pugilist with health regeneration and tuned damage so they can fly solo against teams of two. For those who don’t recall 1999’s original Tag Tournament, Tekken Tag Tournament 2 takes the same framework and three-dimensional engine from the principal Tekken entries and spices things up with tag-team action. ![]()
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