Which of These 2 Anime Games Are You Looking Foward Too The Most?!?

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i wish i can get Naruto 2. but i can't

I never played dragonballz budokamai 2 *aint that a bummer*

But i'm looking foward to 3.
 
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offtopic: err i forgot, i just check my pm box and i rememberd i was suppose to add u for that FS Ice Man..u mind if i still add you now?!? and nice sig by the way ^_^



Gameinformer313 said:
WTF!!!!!!!! Thats Inuyasha for the Playstation 2...WTF happen o_O u sure that isnt for PSX
Yes im Sure :cry: it looks like someone entered a big head cheat or something, and im not a big fan of rpgs.
 
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Sakura said:
offtopic: err i forgot, i just check my pm box and i rememberd i was suppose to add u for that FS Ice Man..u mind if i still add you now?!? and nice sig by the way ^_^





Yes im Sure :cry: it looks like someone entered a big head cheat or something, and im not a big fan of rpgs.
yeah go ahead im still on.

oh yeah sorry.. mp made my sig *adds mp to my sig list*
 
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I was VERY dissappointed in Budokai 2 so it wouldn't suprise me if the Naruto game is a lot better.

Too bad the difference is between the two, unless you have a modded PS2 that can play imports, you won't be playing Naruto: Narutimett Hero 2. By the way, why does that picture show the Rasengan as being yellow. The show depicts it as blue, the color of most people's chakra.
 
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Anyway, the past dbz budokai games were some one of the deepest fighters in history
Let me be the next guy to quote this and laugh my ass off. Have you PLAYED any other fighters lately? Did you notice how Budokai has practically no defensive system, clunky sidestepping, and much less variation in attack (no jumping or anything) than any other fighter out there?

Did you notice all the combos are completely recycled from character to character -to the button?-, and along with the attack animations for them? That the moves are entirely reliant on landing one hit at the end of some predictable, universal combo string that everybody shares?

:p :yes:
 

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Tassadar said:
Too bad the difference is between the two, unless you have a modded PS2 that can play imports, you won't be playing Naruto: Narutimett Hero 2. By the way, why does that picture show the Rasengan as being yellow. The show depicts it as blue, the color of most people's chakra.

Hmm, i never read the magna and the game is based off of it, so maybe the rasengan is yellow in the magna ^^..
 
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uhh dude pan thats not possible, the magna is in black and white (doh) it dosent have color :rolleyes:
 
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For all the people who say the Naruto game is better than the Budokai Series, and that budokai has no depth, then read this, someone else wrote it but it shows u how much depth the budokai games have :\



I cannot even begin to concieve of how Dimps and Atari did this to themselves, but they did. They took a decent fighting game and convinced a horde of fanatical believers that it was worthless. Why they have done this is utterly beyond me.

Budokai 2 is not the poor fighting game, good DBZ simulation that it has been toted as. It has complex, difficult combos, crazy mind games, excellent pressure set ups, and disturbingly effective change-ups. But no one knows about them. They think the game boils down to block, (p,p,p,p,e). And why not? The official strategy guide mentions nothing about any of this. The game's support site mentions nothing about it. These features appear in no gaming mags. The tutorial doesn't mention them. The computer doesn't make use of them unless you set it on the highest difficulty level, and then only occasionally.

At its heart, the Budokai 2 fighting engine is driven by guard-cancels. They can be used to do everything from complex combos to crazy pressure and mind games, and make safe pokes perfectly possible. I'm sure some of you are shaking your heads in disbelief right now, but I ask that you hear me out - I promise to explain myself.

Each character has a number of attack strings that can be charged up by holding down the last button. Tapping guard while it's charging cancels you out of the move and returns you immediately back to neutral. This feature is everything in this game, and if you play through a standard match without using it, you've never really played Budokai. First, I'll get into a description of combos.

There are three ways to do combos in Budokai 2:

1) Stuns
2) Resets
3) Juggles

The "stun" associated with your blows is the time it leaves your enemy reeling from the force of it. Stun increases from the back. If you hit your enemy with a move that has lots more stun than the time it takes you to recover, you can continue on with another string of attacks after it. For example, if you pick Dabura, and do (>p,p,p,p), he will recover while they are still stunned. You can link this into, say, his (p,p,p,p,e), or a lot of other nifty stuff. Canceling is important for this feature because it lessens your recovery time. You can stun an enemy before a cancel, and then recover super quickly to continue hitting them, say with goku's (>p,k,k). Hold down the last kick, and cancel it, and then follow up with whatever.

Resets are more complicated, and require you to get behind the enemy. Getting behind them is easily accomplished after canceling into a stun; if you use the dash command to do the cancel, you can get behind them before they can recover. This gives you additional stun to work with, which makes a lot of combos that normally don't connect work. All you people complaining "I can't get Final Flash to connect...Special Beam Cannon...ad infinitum," this is the official way to do it. They connect when comboed into properly, but you're right - if you don't know what you're doing, you normally can't connect them.

Eh, but I digress. Back to resets. When your enemy attempts to block while you're behind them, they spin around really fast and get into position. If you hit them during this time, it resets them, taking the combo counter back down to 0 and turning the damage back up to full, as well as spinning them back around again. This is really powerful, allowing virtually every character to pull off one combo kills if they guess right on the reset. The problem is, if they don't try to block, it won't work, and you'll find the rest of your combo whiffing due to the timing difference.

Juggles are the most common kind of combos to do. Smack them up into the air, then bat them around while they're up there. Fun!
This requires timing, but is intuitive, and most average players can already do it to some extent.



http://www.shoryuken.com/forums Has a more in depth explanation!


For some videos of real combos, and to see the power of this system in full view, please check out the combos and associated video clips at this SRK thread:

Now that we've gotten that out of the way, onto actual game play - change ups, mind games, and pressure, as promised. This also revolves the cancel engine.

The trick is, there are a million ways to defeat a blocking opponent, and you need an easy way to set them up. They are all set up perfectly off a single cancel, which is where the fun stuff starts.

Let's say you take Goku, and get your opponent to block your (k,k,k,k). You start charging the last (k). Now, what are your options? You could:

Cancel into a throw.
Cancel into a transformation, knocking him back and prepping a combo.
Cancel into a (>>k/p), for a super close range dash attack, which breaks their guard and preps a combo.
Cancel into a charged (p+k), depending on whether you think they'll block or try to attack, and cancel it at will for the psych out. If you land the charge ( Cancel into another chargeable chain, say (>p,k,k), and repeat, to pour on the pressure and punish if they try to escape.
Cancel into a sidestep to bait an attack.
Cancel into a block in anticipation of one.
Cancel into a move with good recovery, say (p) or other generally safe poke, and throw immediately afterwards, or else launch into another string if you think they'll anticipate the throw.
Cancel into a backwards dash, (>e). In all likelihood, you get block damage. At best, they see what they think is a chance to get out, and eat Kamehameha. You can very the timing to catch them if they try to sidestep.
Don't cancel, and let the charged up blow cut through their guard and knock them down, or into the air for an easy juggle.

The beauty of instant recovery is that there's no moment where you're vulnerable. In addition to these options, many characters have chains that inflict guardbreak if blocked (Majin Buu, Teen Gohan, etc.), which prep a combo as well, and roughly half of the characters have chains where the death blow part can be charged up. For instance, if you don't bother to cancel Videls Falcon Rush, but let the launcher become fully charged, it will slice through their guard and they will eat the special move, which is much more painful than a generally unimpressive uncancelled kick or punch.

Escaping this kind of pressure game is difficult. You never know what they're going to do - your opponent has lots of options, and I'd judge your odds of guessing right at around 30%. Try to counter-throw, in the hopes that they'll go for it? Try to counter attack, in the hopes that they mess up? Try to dash away, in the hopes that they won't immediately pursue the offensive, but will side step or cancel into a block or somesuch? Look for an opening to transform, which (if he stayed close enough) will knock him back and reverse your fortunes? If you guess wrong, you eat combo. If you guess right, you've set yourself on the offensive, and now it's your turn to force him to do the guessing.

A match between two good Budokai players is a lot of fun, and very deep, and lightning quick. The first person to screw up eats a lot of damage, and resets the whole thing. Then it's back to poking, prodding, and psyching out, with both sides vying desperately to get on the offensive, where they have the decisive advantage. Two screw ups usually signals the end of the game, and sometimes it only takes one.

I've said a lot of good things about the game, and all in all I do believe it's a good game. It has it's flaws, and I think there are better fighting game out there, but this one seems to get it's reputation purely from a lack of knowledge about the game. And it's all the fault of the people that brought you the game, for giving no one any reason to think the game supported anything like this.

You know what Atari needs to do? Launch a support website that really shows the series off. Start up a stir in the fighting game community. Let people know what the game is all about. Put up video clips that show how the game should be played, and host tournaments and whatnot.

If anyone actually reads this, I am officially impressed. Thanks for sticking around for the rant


written by Goryus from the Atari forum and not from me




There PWNED !!! :laff:
 
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your huge post hasnt changend my opinion at all.what would you all think if the budokai series wasnt based on dbz and had alot of original characters?i think almost everybody would say the gameplay is lame.now people want to make the budokai series better than it actually is.it doesnt resembles the dbz fighting style at all,look at dbz supersonic warriors thats the way it should look like!if they only could make a dbz game with the gameplay from supersonic warriors for the next-gen consoles that would be really awesome.but for now we only have that crappy budokai series.
 

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Wow, and you wasted your time copy & pasting all that. Most of that could already be done in Budokai 2. Go to the GameFAQs boards, sometimes people show off on-going instant kill combos in budokai 2. (They start a combo, cancel it, start another, and keep going).

All that, and Naruto is still better.
 

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budokai 3 offcourse!!!
b2 and b1 (they were preety good if ya ask me) was only a test from atari to us to see what we want the see in a good dbz game
b3 contains all of b1 and b2+much more!!!
 
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Babyboy said:
For all the people who say the Naruto game is better than the Budokai Series, and that budokai has no depth, then read this, someone else wrote it but it shows u how much depth the budokai games have :\



I cannot even begin to concieve of how Dimps and Atari did this to themselves, but they did. They took a decent fighting game and convinced a horde of fanatical believers that it was worthless. Why they have done this is utterly beyond me.

Budokai 2 is not the poor fighting game, good DBZ simulation that it has been toted as. It has complex, difficult combos, crazy mind games, excellent pressure set ups, and disturbingly effective change-ups. But no one knows about them. They think the game boils down to block, (p,p,p,p,e). And why not? The official strategy guide mentions nothing about any of this. The game's support site mentions nothing about it. These features appear in no gaming mags. The tutorial doesn't mention them. The computer doesn't make use of them unless you set it on the highest difficulty level, and then only occasionally.

At its heart, the Budokai 2 fighting engine is driven by guard-cancels. They can be used to do everything from complex combos to crazy pressure and mind games, and make safe pokes perfectly possible. I'm sure some of you are shaking your heads in disbelief right now, but I ask that you hear me out - I promise to explain myself.

Each character has a number of attack strings that can be charged up by holding down the last button. Tapping guard while it's charging cancels you out of the move and returns you immediately back to neutral. This feature is everything in this game, and if you play through a standard match without using it, you've never really played Budokai. First, I'll get into a description of combos.

There are three ways to do combos in Budokai 2:

1) Stuns
2) Resets
3) Juggles

The "stun" associated with your blows is the time it leaves your enemy reeling from the force of it. Stun increases from the back. If you hit your enemy with a move that has lots more stun than the time it takes you to recover, you can continue on with another string of attacks after it. For example, if you pick Dabura, and do (>p,p,p,p), he will recover while they are still stunned. You can link this into, say, his (p,p,p,p,e), or a lot of other nifty stuff. Canceling is important for this feature because it lessens your recovery time. You can stun an enemy before a cancel, and then recover super quickly to continue hitting them, say with goku's (>p,k,k). Hold down the last kick, and cancel it, and then follow up with whatever.

Resets are more complicated, and require you to get behind the enemy. Getting behind them is easily accomplished after canceling into a stun; if you use the dash command to do the cancel, you can get behind them before they can recover. This gives you additional stun to work with, which makes a lot of combos that normally don't connect work. All you people complaining "I can't get Final Flash to connect...Special Beam Cannon...ad infinitum," this is the official way to do it. They connect when comboed into properly, but you're right - if you don't know what you're doing, you normally can't connect them.

Eh, but I digress. Back to resets. When your enemy attempts to block while you're behind them, they spin around really fast and get into position. If you hit them during this time, it resets them, taking the combo counter back down to 0 and turning the damage back up to full, as well as spinning them back around again. This is really powerful, allowing virtually every character to pull off one combo kills if they guess right on the reset. The problem is, if they don't try to block, it won't work, and you'll find the rest of your combo whiffing due to the timing difference.

Juggles are the most common kind of combos to do. Smack them up into the air, then bat them around while they're up there. Fun!
This requires timing, but is intuitive, and most average players can already do it to some extent.



http://www.shoryuken.com/forums Has a more in depth explanation!


For some videos of real combos, and to see the power of this system in full view, please check out the combos and associated video clips at this SRK thread:

Now that we've gotten that out of the way, onto actual game play - change ups, mind games, and pressure, as promised. This also revolves the cancel engine.

The trick is, there are a million ways to defeat a blocking opponent, and you need an easy way to set them up. They are all set up perfectly off a single cancel, which is where the fun stuff starts.

Let's say you take Goku, and get your opponent to block your (k,k,k,k). You start charging the last (k). Now, what are your options? You could:

Cancel into a throw.
Cancel into a transformation, knocking him back and prepping a combo.
Cancel into a (>>k/p), for a super close range dash attack, which breaks their guard and preps a combo.
Cancel into a charged (p+k), depending on whether you think they'll block or try to attack, and cancel it at will for the psych out. If you land the charge ( Cancel into another chargeable chain, say (>p,k,k), and repeat, to pour on the pressure and punish if they try to escape.
Cancel into a sidestep to bait an attack.
Cancel into a block in anticipation of one.
Cancel into a move with good recovery, say (p) or other generally safe poke, and throw immediately afterwards, or else launch into another string if you think they'll anticipate the throw.
Cancel into a backwards dash, (>e). In all likelihood, you get block damage. At best, they see what they think is a chance to get out, and eat Kamehameha. You can very the timing to catch them if they try to sidestep.
Don't cancel, and let the charged up blow cut through their guard and knock them down, or into the air for an easy juggle.

The beauty of instant recovery is that there's no moment where you're vulnerable. In addition to these options, many characters have chains that inflict guardbreak if blocked (Majin Buu, Teen Gohan, etc.), which prep a combo as well, and roughly half of the characters have chains where the death blow part can be charged up. For instance, if you don't bother to cancel Videls Falcon Rush, but let the launcher become fully charged, it will slice through their guard and they will eat the special move, which is much more painful than a generally unimpressive uncancelled kick or punch.

Escaping this kind of pressure game is difficult. You never know what they're going to do - your opponent has lots of options, and I'd judge your odds of guessing right at around 30%. Try to counter-throw, in the hopes that they'll go for it? Try to counter attack, in the hopes that they mess up? Try to dash away, in the hopes that they won't immediately pursue the offensive, but will side step or cancel into a block or somesuch? Look for an opening to transform, which (if he stayed close enough) will knock him back and reverse your fortunes? If you guess wrong, you eat combo. If you guess right, you've set yourself on the offensive, and now it's your turn to force him to do the guessing.

A match between two good Budokai players is a lot of fun, and very deep, and lightning quick. The first person to screw up eats a lot of damage, and resets the whole thing. Then it's back to poking, prodding, and psyching out, with both sides vying desperately to get on the offensive, where they have the decisive advantage. Two screw ups usually signals the end of the game, and sometimes it only takes one.

I've said a lot of good things about the game, and all in all I do believe it's a good game. It has it's flaws, and I think there are better fighting game out there, but this one seems to get it's reputation purely from a lack of knowledge about the game. And it's all the fault of the people that brought you the game, for giving no one any reason to think the game supported anything like this.

You know what Atari needs to do? Launch a support website that really shows the series off. Start up a stir in the fighting game community. Let people know what the game is all about. Put up video clips that show how the game should be played, and host tournaments and whatnot.

If anyone actually reads this, I am officially impressed. Thanks for sticking around for the rant


written by Goryus from the Atari forum and not from me




There PWNED !!! :laff:
Yeah, you already posted this in your own thread and we all saw it. It doesn't change a damn thing, the game still sucks ass, and using this one cancel feature doesn't change that. Maybe you should go back and re-read my post since you obviously didnt.

http://forum.esforces.com/showthread.php?t=44920
 
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well i didnt read yall your posts (just looked at Pics)

i never saw or read or playerd soemthing with Naruto so i cant say that game is going to be bad or good, But it looks good, when its coming to Germany im buying that, and Budokai 3 where i jave Pre-ordered already, they bots seem to look good.
 
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Tassadar said:
I was VERY dissappointed in Budokai 2 so it wouldn't suprise me if the Naruto game is a lot better.

Too bad the difference is between the two, unless you have a modded PS2 that can play imports, you won't be playing Naruto: Narutimett Hero 2. By the way, why does that picture show the Rasengan as being yellow. The show depicts it as blue, the color of most people's chakra.
Thats not totally correct. Naruto: Narutimet Hero is coming to the U.S. so more then likely two is coming out here as well, just not until a very long time(i have the disc swapper so ive been playn imports =D). As for the yellow rasengan im not sure, the game is based on the manga not anime but even so theres no color in the manga. I'd imagine they made the game way before rasengan was already being throwed into the anime, so it came out yellow. Who knows.
 

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Naruto 1 is not coming to the US. The rumors have been shattered. And, for the second time, the rasengan is the artist's perception of the manga, since Naruto 2 was probably started before rasengan was shown on the anime.
 
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SuperSaiyaChris said:
Naruto 1 is not coming to the US. The rumors have been shattered. And, for the second time, the rasengan is the artist's perception of the manga, since Naruto 2 was probably started before rasengan was shown on the anime.

Uhh it is coming to the US, since when was the rumour shattered go and check ign SSC :]
 
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Hmmmm...If the rumors "shattered" then bleh, i've had it since sumtime after it came out so means nothing to me =D. But to be honest about the rasengen, I like the yellow color, looks pretty nice.
 
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It appears there was an recent update in the Naruto PS2 Roster, we now have 15 characters, just 15 more to go









 
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YAY TenTen ^^ Cool now all they need is Temari and ill be Very Very Happy, i just wish i knew how to get these japanese games to play on my PS2, oh well i will find out by the time this is released.
 

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