![]() ![]() You’ll run across a giant fire monkey that wouldn’t be out of place in a Pokemon game, a murderous crow, a massive porcupine, and some even more impressive creatures later on, all heavily rooted in the environments they call home. The Sapscourge is literally a scourge of sap, producing a dangerous surplus of the life-giving substance and threatening to enfold everything in its sticky embrace. Tiny mice mutate into giant, berry-sprouting, flower-bedecked rodents intent on devouring everything in their path. The Kemono you target in Wild Hearts are an evident problem from the beginning. Outside the giant Elder Dragons actively trying to eat every human in sight, most of the monsters just seem at home in their environment – minding their own business in the oceans, mushroom forests, and fetid boneyards until you come along and kill them just in case they decide to cause problems later. ![]() It’s always a bit difficult to believe Monster Hunter ’s critters are the threats the game says they are. While Wild Hearts does wear its inspirations perhaps a bit too openly at times, it takes some worthwhile risks with its combat and monster design, builds a more coherent world around them, and offers a fresh At a glance, the monster-hunting game from Koei Tecmo and Dynasty Warriors -maker Omega Force, seems like a Monster Hunter clone, but a closer look shows something much more creative and thoughtful. The tired adage about not judging books by their covers was never more true than it is with Wild Hearts. ![]()
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