Curratum
Guest
Now that Bloodstained is easily available on all platforms, it's really not worth it to waste time on any other metroidvanias.
I've little interest in most 2d platformers, but I'm a huge fan of metroidvanias for this exact reason. If finding powerful upgrades and secret rewards isn't a huge draw for you though, I'd say the genre has little to offer. I enjoyed the Megaman X games a lot for the same reason- sliding down the side of a bottomless deathpit and disappearing inside the wall to find a hidden room that lets you take half damage for the rest of the game or something like that feels awesome in a way that getting the same upgrade dumped in your lap as you explore a mandatory dungeon can't compare. Or getting a grappling hook and remembering the treasure waiting at the other end of a hallway with spikes across the floor.So here is a pretty stupid question.I am wondering is there any point in trying get into metroidvanias if you are not interested into 2d platformers.
Does the exploration element alone give it a big edge over normal platformers?
From my experience metroidvanias are more about exploration to find powerups to help with combat and platforming, usually eventually leading to just having to hold a button to float in the air and/or destroy anything near.So here is a pretty stupid question.I am wondering is there any point in trying get into metroidvanias if you are not interested into 2d platformers.
Does the exploration element alone give it a big edge over normal platformers?
Not being interested in a genre doesn't automatically mean you will find no games from this genre worth playing.So here is a pretty stupid question.I am wondering is there any point in trying get into metroidvanias if you are not interested into 2d platformers.
Does the exploration element alone give it a big edge over normal platformers?
This reminds me of Turricans on the good ol' c64.I've little interest in most 2d platformers, but I'm a huge fan of metroidvanias for this exact reason. If finding powerful upgrades and secret rewards isn't a huge draw for you though, I'd say the genre has little to offer. I enjoyed the Megaman X games a lot for the same reason- sliding down the side of a bottomless deathpit and disappearing inside the wall to find a hidden room that lets you take half damage for the rest of the game or something like that feels awesome in a way that getting the same upgrade dumped in your lap as you explore a mandatory dungeon can't compare. Or getting a grappling hook and remembering the treasure waiting at the other end of a hallway with spikes across the floor.So here is a pretty stupid question.I am wondering is there any point in trying get into metroidvanias if you are not interested into 2d platformers.
Does the exploration element alone give it a big edge over normal platformers?
Hm!Is there any metroidvanias with tb party combat?
Valkyrie Profile is what i had in mind, just more open.And this might count?
Valdis story abyssal city is a kinda DMC + metroidvania mix.That seems like a metroidvania coupled with some sort of combo system, presumably a la fighting games. The overall design looks really goofy and I haven't looked into it much, but I've always wanted a more Devil May Cry style combat in my platformers.
Well it's more a wormslike with character advancement maybe Steamworld Heist might scratch that itch.Is there any metroidvanias with tb party combat?
As a Dark Hunter you were dropped into a wreaked world. To survive, you need to equip yourself, fight through your way, collecting ‘shards’ from killing super nature creatures to reinforce your energy. Through surviving, you will explore the mysterious dark zones of the apocalypse world.