When played by some of the folks I bumped into in online, Tekken can be a thing of beauty. At the hands of a relatively unskilled player like me, the game looks stiff and disjointed because my flow of movements is exactly that. Despite it’s constant goofiness - starting with the characters including a variety of animals, robots, and deities - Tekken is quite possibly the most technical fighter I have played.
I have played several Tekken games off and on over the years, especially this generation, and TTT2 on the Wii U maintains that sort of Virtua Fighter meets Street Fighter feel. Also of note, and this is actually pretty amazing when you think about it, this is the first Tekken game on a Nintendo console (not handheld, but home console) to date.īoth in terms of presentation and in playing TTT2 on the Wii U, the robustness of the game and the feel of it doesn’t miss a beat. Even without it, and it could be added in later on I suppose, TTT2 is jam-packed with content sure to please any Tekken fan and quite possibly garner new ones. From what I have gathered and read online, the only mode missing is the WTF, also known as the World Tekken Federation. What the Wii U Edition manages to do, right at the Wii U launch no less, is put together what is probably the most complete port of a previously released game of them all (and there are quite a few of them). For Tekken, it’s Eric, and his excellent review from September of Tekken Tag Tournament 2 ( TTT2) is highly recommended reading for anyone looking for a complete review of TTT2. If it’s anything Nintendo, Steve’s the man. A short and very incomplete list would look something like this: if I want to talk Madden, I hit up Nathan. On our site, we’ve got guys associated with certain games.