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Warriors All-Stars

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Warriors All-Stars
Developer(s)Omega Force
Publisher(s)Koei Tecmo
Director(s)Tomohiko Aoki
Producer(s)Masaki Furusawa
SeriesWarriors
Platform(s)PlayStation 4
PlayStation Vita
Microsoft Windows
ReleasePS4, PSVita
PS4, Windows
  • US: August 29, 2017[2]
  • EU: September 1, 2017
Genre(s)Hack and slash, action
Mode(s)Single-player

Warriors All-Stars,[3] (or Musou Stars (無双☆スターズ, Musō ☆ Sutāzu) in Japan) is a hack and slash game by Koei Tecmo. It is a crossover based on the long-running Warriors series, featuring an array of cast taken from various titles owned by the company, similar to the Warriors Orochi series. It was released on March 30, 2017 in Japan.[1] It will also be released along with a PC version on August 29, 2017 in US and September 3, 2017 in Europe.

Gameplay

The gameplay is modeled after the hack-and-slash Warriors series, in which the player controls a single character to defeat enemies throughout a stage while trying to achieve a specific goal. In Warriors All-Stars, each player may also select four supporting characters to assist the chosen character; the supporting characters lend additional abilities that may be triggered by holding down R1 and selecting a face button. Certain pairs of characters, when assisting the character at the same time, may combine their attacks for additional effect.

Although the game uses the Warriors Orochi series as its inspiration, the game engine is highly reminiscent of Samurai Warriors: Spirit of Sanada and gameplay is closer to that of Dynasty Warriors 8: Empires. All characters have a similar movepool of a normal attack chain of six attacks, and six charge attacks, as with the Dynasty Warriors series. In addition, effort was made so that each character's moveset remains true to their series of origin (Ryu Hayabusa, Ayane, and Kasumi, who previously appeared in Warriors Orochi 3, have their movesets entirely redone as a result). Samurai Warriors series characters have their normal and hyper attack chain shortened to accommodate the attack system, though they are given a sixth charge attack to compensate; Dynasty Warriors series characters have some of their charge attacks altered either visually or in their function for this game.

As not every character is armed with a weapon, as is traditional in Warriors games, character growth instead focuses on hero cards, which take the place of weapons in this game. Hero cards may be equipped to a corresponding hero, and grant the hero increased abilities. Each character may have up to 20 cards in their inventory, although only one may be equipped to a character at any given time. Unwanted and excess hero cards may be sold for gold between missions or disassembled for materials that may be spent to enhance other hero cards. Gold may also be spent to level up characters, though only to the highest-levelled character currently available to the player.

The stages featured are themed after the series of origin for the various characters, though some stages are taken from Samurai Warriors 4 and Dynasty Warriors 8 series games, either taken as-is or themed to another series' visuals. (This had also occurred with Warriors Orochi 3 series games as well.) Visuals include a Nara-era Japanese garden and a medieval European ruins were featured, based on Toukiden: The Age of Demons and Atelier titles, respectively.[4] Music for the game primarily consists of remixed versions of theme music from the characters' series of origin. Most themes contain two mixes: a "Starlet Mix" that is primarily orchestral in nature, and a "Stars Mix" that is similar, but places greater prominence on rock instruments, as traditional in the Warriors series.

The game story features a scenario that unfolds based on the initial character chosen at the start of the game. The storyline is nonlinear, and may be advanced at a player's own pace. Most missions do not advance the plot, and merely serves as side missions meant to raise a character's skills and abilities, akin to Free Mode in other Warriors games. "Hero Battles" allow additional characters to be unlocked, while "Key Battles" advance the story. The completion of certain Key Battles may prevent the player from participating in other missions, and some Key Battles may require that characters be unlocked through Hero Battles before they may be played. [5] There are 15 total endings in Warriors All-Stars, necessitating multiple play-throughs in order to experience the complete story.[6]

The game is strictly single-player, though the producers have not ruled out a future update that includes multiplayer functionality.

Story

The primary setting of Warriors All-Stars is a kingdom relying an a magical spring to sustain themselves. When the king of the kingdom suddenly dies and the spring begins to wither, the widowed queen and priestess of the spring, Sayo (小夜, voiced by Aya Endo) informs her three charges, her children Tamaki (環, voiced by Yūki Takada) and Shiki (志貴, voiced by Kazuyuki Okitsu), as well as her nephew Setsuna (刹那, voiced by Yukitoshi Kikuchi), that the spring must be restored using the power of otherworldly heroes. When Tamaki attempts to summon the heroes using the last of the spring's magic, the summoning goes awry, and the heroes are scattered throughout the land. Each of the three charges proceed to recruit the various summoned heroes to their cause in a race to restore the fountain and claim the throne for themselves.

The story then turns its focus to a hero selected by the player before the first mission. This hero is generally joined by the other heroes from the same series of origin (characters who are the sole representatives of their series are joined by characters from a second series), who are in turn recruited by one of the three charges for their cause; the second mission introduces the two other rival claimants to the throne and their respective forces. At this point, the story branches off into three broad campaigns, based on the royal heir that has recruited the hero.

Each of the three campaigns has a special condition that must be met for the story to switch to a fourth campaign, in which all heroes will be available for use.

Characters

The game features 30 playable characters, 27 heroes spanning 13 series owned by Koei Tecmo, as well as three original characters. The three original characters are inspired by the Imperial Regalia of Japan, and consist of:

  • Tamaki: A princess responsible for summoning heroes from other worlds to help restore her kingdom after her father's death. Though she is chosen as heir to the throne, her right is challenged by other members of the royalty. She wields a weapon inspired by the Yata no Kagami. Her voice actress is Yūki Takada.
  • Shiki: One of the kingdom's princes and Tamaki's older brother, he originally accepted her status as heir apparent before renouncing it for unknown reasons. His weapon is based on the Yasakani no Magatama. His voice actor is Kazuyuki Okitsu.
  • Setsuna: A member of the royalty and Tamaki and Shiki's cousin who makes claim for the throne, which originally belonged to his father. He wields a weapon inspired by the Kusanagi. His voice actor is Yukitoshi Kikuchi.

Each of the heroes is aligned to either Tamaki, Shiki, or Setsuna based on their series of origin. Tamaki's faction consists of Dynasty Warriors, Toukiden, Opoona, and Atelier series characters, Shiki's faction consists of Samurai Warriors, Ninja Gaiden, Haruka: Beyond the Stream of Time and Nioh series characters, while Setsuna's faction consists of Dead or Alive, Deception, Nights of Azure, Rio, and Samurai Cats series characters.

Bold denotes characters that may be chosen for the first mission. (A pre-order bonus also allows Opoona to be chosen as the starting character.) Hero Battles that unlock characters not in the starting roster (the starting character as well as the characters unlocked after the second mission as a result) are generally restricted to the character's associated faction (for example, Zhao Yun may only be unlocked through a Hero Battle if Sophie, Opoona, or Ōka is the starting character), though some characters (such as Honoka or Mitsunari Ishida) have Hero Battles that are available regardless of the chosen faction.

Game Characters Voice actor
Atelier Plachta Yuka Iguchi
Sophie Yūka Aisaka
Dead or Alive Honoka Ai Nonaka
Kasumi Houko Kuwashima
Marie Rose Mai Aizawa
Deception Laegrinna Yuka Saitō
Millennia Junko Minagawa
Dynasty Warriors Lu Bu Tetsu Inada
Wang Yuanji Kanae Itō
Zhao Yun Masaya Onosaka
Zhou Cang Chiharu Sawashiro
Haruka: Beyond the Stream of Time Darius Kenichi Suzumura
Hajime Arima Takuma Terashima
Nights of Azure Arnice M·A·O
Christophorus Tomoyo Kurosawa
Ninja Gaiden Ayane Wakana Yamazaki
Ryu Hayabusa Hideyuki Hori
Nioh William Adams Ben Peel
Opoona Opoona Yūsuke Kobayashi
'Rio Rio Marina Inoue
Samurai Cats Nobunyaga Oda Shunsuke Takeuchi
Samurai Warriors Mitsunari Ishida Eiji Takemoto
Naotora Ii Yuka Saito
Yukimura Sanada Takeshi Kusao
Toukiden: The Age of Demons Horō Haruka Terui
Ōka Masumi Asano
Tokitsugu Kōichi Yamadera

Development

The game was first confirmed with a teaser trailer released on September 13, 2016.[7][8][9] Development had started since the previous summer and was originally planned to be a new entry for the Warriors Orochi series, but the developers felt the need to make something different, using several Koei Tecmo titles as base.[5] The game will have a narrower count of characters than the Warriors Orochi series to better flesh out the existing characters; it was later confirmed that the game would have around 30 characters spanning 10 titles.[5] Although the characters who will appear have been finalized, a survey was conducted in the Famitsu magazine for the possibility of expansions through DLC.[5] A livestream was conducted in Niconico on December 1, 2016. Initially with a targeted release date of March 2, 2017,[10] the game was later pushed back to March 30, 2017.

Reception

The game received positive critical reception, with Famitsu giving the score of 35 for both versions of the game.[11] It sold 40,368 and 17,866 physical retail copies for the PlayStation 4 and PlayStation Vita versions, respectively, during its first week of release.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b "Musou Stars Delayed By About A Month In Japan To March 30, 2017". Siliconera. January 31, 2017. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
  2. ^ Warriors All-Stars (AKA: Musou Stars in Japan) is headed stateside for the PS4 and PC Steam on August 29, 2017, Twitter, April 11, 2017, retrieved April 11, 2017
  3. ^ https://www.tmdn.org/tmview/get-detail?st13=EM500000016556144
  4. ^ "Musou Stars first details, screenshots". Gematsu. September 30, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d "Musou Stars adds Millennia from Kagero: Deception II [Update: about 30 characters, multiple endings, more]". Gematsu. September 27, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  6. ^ http://s.famitsu.com/news/201612/13122875.html
  7. ^ "Koei Tecmo Announces Musou Stars Featuring Characters From Atelier, Dead or Alive, And More". Siliconera. September 13, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  8. ^ "Musou Stars announced for PS4, PS Vita". Gematsu. September 13, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  9. ^ "『無双☆スターズ』ティザーPV". YouTube. September 13, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  10. ^ "Musou Stars Game's 1st Full Promo Video Reveals March 2 Release Date". Anime News Network. December 2, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  11. ^ "Famitsu Review Scores: Issue 1477". Gematsu. March 21, 2017. Retrieved April 6, 2017.
  12. ^ "「無双☆スターズ」合計5万8000本。「BLUE REFLECTION」「マリオスポーツ スーパースターズ」などもランクインの「週間販売ランキング+」". 4gamer. April 5, 2017. Retrieved April 6, 2017.