![]() ![]() ![]() Even Crazier Combat in Bayonetta 3Īlongside the seriously crazy and fun boss fights are a similar amount of ways to fight and play in Bayonetta 3. In the previous games, there were experiments with weapons you could buy or find to spice up the gameplay. Every mission with Bayonetta always ends with one of these segments and it is always so much fun. Like an early point in the game where you fight a giant monster, as a giant monster. As well as crazy over-the-top set-piece moments that blew me away with how cool they were. Giving it the opportunity to stuff as many battle scenarios as possible. The way each mission for every character is carried out is also similarly linear to the previous games. While Jeanne barely speaks in hers as she radiates this aura of “less is more” that does not give me the opportunity to dislike her place in the story. Playing as her always felt like the lowest point of the game since Bayonetta, even in the first game, is fully realized and does not need to do much for me to adore her presence in the story. I could boil down her character design, writing, and even her voice acting as the epitome of “it’s not a phase, mom”. Which is laid bare during missions where you have to play as her. However, Viola is sadly not as great of a character as she could be. While you also get to play as her companion, Jeanne in bite-size side-scrolling missions in between the bombastic story missions with Bayonetta and the newest character, Viola. Bayonetta takes center stage with her never faltering swagger. The plot is as basic as ever but is carried, as always, by the charm each character radiates. From there it is up to her, and her companions both old and new, to stop the threat before it’s too late. The protagonist, Bayonetta finds a new enemy faction starting a catastrophic event for her and the earth. Leaving me satisfied outside of a few huge speedbumps and some haze along the way.īayonetta 3 starts as every game does. Since once I put my foot on the gas, it was almost impossible to stop. Familiar charming characters, action-packed set pieces, unbelievably satisfying combat, and thrill rides galore paced nearly perfectly. What they achieved in the previous entries is, instead, amped up to eleven in this game. But instead, question the quality of the game’s storytelling, when in reality, Bayonetta 1 and 2 never had an impressive story. As the talk is not just about how this third, and hopefully final entry delivers a grand finale. Regardless of what ends up happening in the final game, the new trailer - and the theorize it's inspiring - indicates that Bayonetta 3 will be well worth the long wait.Ever since Bayonetta 3launched there has been a concerning amount of discourse surrounding it. Fanbyte's Imran Khan has also pointed out that the original Bayonetta 3 teaser showed the original game's version of Bayonetta being seemingly defeated by a mysterious entity, perhaps meaning that Cereza will have to save her. With time travel and alternate universes already established as concepts in the Bayonetta series, it's possible that this theory will be confirmed. While fans at the time thought this was Taylor cryptically referring to some behind-the-scenes recasting drama, it could be that this alternate version of Cereza is being voiced by someone else - potentially opening the door for her to return as the original Bayonetta. Earlier this month, Bayonetta's voice actor Hellena Taylor said fans "might have to" get used to the character without her voice, refusing to clarify, likely due to contractual obligations. Twitter user Suzi Hunter pointed out that the Bayonetta of the trailer may not be the same one as previous games, but instead an older Cereza. The main evidence supporting this theory is that the new Bayonetta has the same hairstyle as Cereza down to the red ribbons in her braids.Īdditionally, fans have pointed out that the Bayonetta sounds a bit different in the trailer than in previous games. ![]()
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