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No More Heroes

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GT reviews No More Heroes for the Nintendo Wii, which is “one of the most rewarding and dependable of motion-intensive Wii titles to date.” Video after the break. Here’s the bottom line:

What you’ll really be getting with No More Heroes is a stylistic offering very rare outside of Grasshopper Studios on Wii, or anywhere else for that matter. The game suffers from a tech standpoint, but relishes in the fact that it has created a ridiculous, over-the-top world for players to enjoy

Ubisoft has just released a new “No More Heroes” trailer, showing off its action-packed gameplay. Expect to shell out $49.99 for this game when it’s released on January 22. Video after the break. Click here for first picture in gallery.

No More Heroes hopes to pull you in with a very stylistic experience, mixing well-modeled characters with cel-shading and tons of particle effects to deliver a very visceral (though still somewhat tasteful) experience that is above-all totally unique

GT provides us with an in-depth preview of No More Heroes for the Nintendo Wii, where the “gameplay is all about using your Beam Katana (via Wii remote) to defeat enemies.” Video after the break. Click here for first picture in gallery.

The first thing we need to mention about No More Heroes is the aspect everyone can instantly experience when looking at video or checking out screens of the game; its style is through the roof. Just like Killer 7, No More Heroes hopes to pull you in with a very stylistic experience, mixing well-modeled characters with cel-shading and tons of particle effects to deliver a very visceral experience that is above-all totally unique

GT provides us with the latest No More Heroes gameplay footage. Set for release on the Nintendo Wii, this game lets you “explore the town to your liking, taking on missions large and small to collect money and purchase new weapons as you work up towards the 10 main killing contracts.” Videos after the break. Click here for first picture in gallery.

Yes, in a sense you can say that No More Heroes trumps the overly-violent Rockstar effort, but it does so in a very comic, “neo-punk” style. You’ll split people in half the long way with a single jumping attack, but rather than focusing on the graphic nature you’ll see the two pieces of the enemy slide apart with a fountain of artistically done blood…

In this feature, we take a look at No More Heroes‘ interesting “slash system”. Video after the break. Click here for more pictures.

No More Heroes takes place in the city of Santa Destroy, and you are free to explore the town to your liking, taking on missions large and small to collect money and purchase new weapons as you work up towards the 10 main killing contracts. Gameplay is all about using your Beam Katana (via Wii remote) to defeat enemies

No More Heroes for the Nintendo Wii basically “takes place in the city of Santa Destroy, and you are free to explore the town to your liking, taking on missions large and small to collect money and purchase new weapons as you work up towards the 10 main killing contracts.” Video after the break. Click here for more pictures.

In this adventure game directed by Goichi Suda (of Killer 7 fame), you play as Travis Touchdown, a normal guy (with an otaku geek streak to him) who wins a Beam Katana through an online auction and uses the weapon to start a new career as a professional killer. One day, an assassin named Helter Skelter appears before Travis and the two face off in a battle