#Dead or alive xtreme 3 gameplay tv#
The former's video game meets TV show approach sounds a lot like 2013's Defiance, and that was so much hot garbage-but perhaps the end product here will be rather different. They should probably fix Ci(n)d(y)'s clothes, though, as that getup's going to get her arrested.Īnd, um, throw Remedy's Quantum Break and Ubisoft's The Division in here for the time being, too. That said, I quite liked the game's "Episode Duscae" demo, with its dazzling battles and massive summon, so I'm remaining optimistic about this one. (I probably should restart Persona 3 to work out what all the fuss is about.) Assuming it comes out in 2016, Final Fantasy XV is likely to be more divisive amongst followers of Square Enix's long-running role-playing series, abandoning as it does turn-based combat for real-time scuffles and casting the player as a dude who looks like a depressed boyband reject. With very little prior experience of its parent series, I can't confidently comment on whether the Altus-made RPG-cum-dungeon-crawler Persona 5 is going to be a guaranteed winner or not-but I know plenty of people who loved Persona 4 with every ounce of their blackened hearts, so what the hell, let's say it'll feature in 70 percent of the top ten lists come the end of 2016. 'Persona 5,' Tokyo Game Show 2015 trailer Just replacing semi-automatic firearms with bows won't be enough. (And some more that it'll need to trump: Rise of the Tomb Raider.) The prehistoric Far Cry Primal, due in February, needs to mix up its more modern precursors' tried-and-tested mechanics, too, for it to feel like a significant step forward for Ubisoft's shooter series. There was a real sense of finality, of loose ends being tied, to Nathan Drake's story come the climactic cutscene of Uncharted 3, so whatever this follow-up has to add to his tale, beyond the return of a presumed-dead brother, it really needs to be substantial or else the familiar gunplay will pale well prior to the game's final stages. If it adds little to the existing formula for the series, it'll still be an enjoyable Hollywood-aping romp-but likely terrifically hollow with it. The fourth main Uncharted game, A Thief's End, was struck by a few delays, moving its release date from 2015 to April 2016. The Games That'll Be OK, At Least, But I Don't Know, Some Might StinkĪ whole bunch of triple-A titles slip comfortably into this category of anticipation, purely because of precedent screaming that not everything is likely to be rosy.