![]() ![]() Sound a little cynical? Well, maybe you should play Bloody Roar 4 and see for yourself (you should probably rent first), but if you are interested, don't expect anything of the caliber (pun intended) of Soul Calibur, Tekken, Virtua Fighter or Dead or Alive. Here's a game that's brought to the US because it's already made its money in Japan and with little cost expenditure, bringing it to the US should translate into gravy income, even if it's only a little. ![]() What it looks like we have with Bloody Roar 4 is profits. After the quiet arcade release in the US, the Zoanthrope transformation fighter never truly progressed enough to lead the changing fighters of the time, and despite the growing number of combos and added animals to transform into over the years, Hudson's once interesting series has pretty much remained at a standstill.īloody Roar 4 offers enough changes and alterations to differentiate this one from Bloody Roar 3, but Hudson hasn't given the game the dedicated depth or fine precision of Sega's latest Virtua Fighter or the intense charisma, combat stylization or playability of Namco's Soul Calibur series, either. There's nothing like a good fighting game to get your adrenaline running, and Hudson, with its ongoing Bloody Roar series, definitely had a good start in 1998.
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