Prototype 2 picks up a year after the events of Radical Entertainment’s first third-person superpowered sandbox slash ‘em up. You’re gonna be just fine.” Like Prototype 2 itself, Heller is entertaining in small doses but also gets a little old all too quickly. About halfway through the game, I felt like giving him a big hug and offering a reassuring: “Dude, you can run up buildings and turn your hands into giant razorblades. He literally stews in his own rage-juices and drops irate f-bombs with righteous indignation. James Heller, the world weary protagonist of Prototype 2, is no exception. From Marcus Fenix’s incessant droning on about his old man, to Commander Shepard’s intergalactic handwringing, to Modern Warfare commandos waxing poetic on the horrors of war, you can’t shoot an alien/terrorist in the face without having some brooding anti-hero wallowing in their own existential angst about it afterwards. Maybe it’s just me, but these days it seems like a lot of video game protagonists have become - well, kind of a bunch of whiny d-bags.
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In addition to the Campaign mode, there is an Arcade mode where you fight through an increasingly difficult series of opponents until you face Lord Drakkon himself. While the campaign mode has you fight as a solo fighter quite often, the Arcade and Versus modes have you choose a team of three fighters, with these fighters acting as back up, support, etc. The fighting, however, feels like it draws inspiration from a number of sources-like Street Fighter, and the Capcom Versus series, where you can swap between multiple fighters in a battle, and have them jump in to help in crucial moments. The story also feels like it takes heavy cues from Netherrealm’s latest Mortal Kombat games, and more notably, the Injustice series, for how the story plays out-and even how it’s presented, with fighting usually happening after some relevant cutscene. Lord Drakkon-the evil version of Tommy Oliver (the original Green/White Ranger) is trying to steal morphers across the “grid” so he can amplify his own evil power. With all that in mind, let's take a look at the Apex Legends Arenas weapon tier list. F-Tier: These weapons are simply not working in Arenas.
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