![]() ![]() Awful facial and body animations to rival Mass Effect: Andromeda and Ride to Hell: Retribution.The rest are real-life locations (apart from the training stage), which is out of place for such a crossover. Only six anime locations (Namek and the World Tournament Stage from Dragon Ball Z, the Hidden Leaf Village and the Final Valley from Naruto, and Marineford and Whole Cake Island from One Piece) are available as fighting stages.Additionally, they can see Stands too even though Stands are canonically invisible to non-Stand users.Although the members of the Jump Force posses umbras cubes, nobody except the hero can see Ryuk.No English voice acting, most likely due to the licensing of different American companies of their anime adaptations, like Funimation for Dragon Ball and One Piece, Viz Media for JoJo's Bizarre Adventure and 4Kids (now known as Konami Cross Media NY) for Yu-Gi-Oh!.The god complex he had in his home series is nowhere to be seen, which makes his character extremely bland. As a result, the reveal where he betrays the main characters is obvious and pointless. Although Death Note's Light Yagami prominently appears in the trailers, he is not playable and just uses the Jump Force as a shield while he searches for his Death Note and Ryuk. ![]() It is too easy to dodge and block Kenshirō's iconic Hokuto Hyakuretsu Ken (English: Hundred Crack Fist) move, even when he's performing it at point-blank range.For the former six at least, their exclusion may be because their comedic nature would clash with the more serious tone the game is trying to go with. ![]() Certain franchises like Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo, Gintama, Shaman King, Ninku and Kinnikuman are nowhere to be seen.Another popular series is Demon Slayer, which has no playable characters although this can be excused since this game came out before the anime was released. Outside of a lack of coverage in general, the franchise's main protagonist Izuku "Deku" Midoriya was the only playable character from that series at launch. Just like the shows in Cartoon Network: Battle Crashers, the manga series My Hero Academia, currently one of Shonen Jump's most popular and well-reviewed franchises, isn't represented well.While Dragon Ball Z, One Piece, and Naruto (if Boruto counts) got six playable characters each at launch, the others have way less except Hunter X Hunter and Bleach.The fighters scream at the top of their lungs for every action, even taking a small punch. Even Goku, Luffy, and Naruto, who are featured in the cover art, do little more than be team leaders. The game at launch only had 40 playable characters, but only a couple of them contribute to the game's story while the rest is relegated to side missions.Some of the characters will directly dash out of the screen while at a standstill or fly straight up into the sky. The story mode cutscenes look unpolished and the character animations are stiff and jerky, like puppets.Speaking of framerates, the Nintendo Switch port suffers from an extremely low framerate (it runs at 15 fps).In fact, this fighting game is capped at 30FPS on the PS4 Pro and Xbox One X when 60FPS is the norm for low-budget fighters like Rivals of Aether and Them's Fightin' Herds and even free fighting games like Brawlhalla.Even playing on an enhanced system like the PS4 Pro and Xbox One X won't make the game run any better. ![]()
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