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![]() ![]() Players will either ride through the town on Travis’ trusty motor bike or travel on foot to arrive at Travis’ next assignment. During the course of the game, players encounter Sylvia, a mysterious woman from the United Assassins Association, who arranges fights with other higher ranked assassins to help Travis become the number one in the world. Equipped with a razor sharp Beam Katana sword, players start off as the 11th ranked assassin and try to move up the ranks to position themselves as the ultimate killer. In No More Heroes: Heroes’ Paradise, players journey through the sunny city of Santa Destroy as Travis Touchdown, battling to eliminate some of the world’s deadliest assassins. Developed by AQ Interactive Inc., No More Heroes: Heroes’ Paradise will be available exclusively for PlayStation 3 in North America as Travis Touchdown returns to become the world’s number one assassin. announced today that No More Heroes: Heroes’ Paradise is coming to PlayStation 3 and will be compatible with Sony’s new PlayStation Move controls. ![]() Players Help Travis Touchdown Hack and Slash Through the Ranks of the United Assassins Association With new Playstation Move ControlsĮl Segundo, Calif. KONAMI ANNOUNCES NO MORE HEROES: HEROES’ PARADISE FOR PLAYSTATION MOVE If you’ve got questions, drop them in the comments and KONAMI will address them in a future post. Please be sure to read the press release below for more details, take a look at the first screenshots, and know that we’ll have more on No More Heroes: Heroes’ Paradise here on the PlayStation.Blog as we approach the game’s release. That means you’ll be swinging your Beam Katana through Santa Destroy’s top assassins with the power and precision of PlayStation Move, all in HD. In 2011, North American PS3 owners will get their first taste of the No More Heroes universe, and KONAMI’s making use of the power of the platform to add new features, additional bosses, and PlayStation Move support. I would rather take the black pixels over the budget-looking slosh the HD version got.Our friends at KONAMI wanted PlayStation fans to be the first to know – Travis Touchdown is making the leap into high definition exclusively for the PS3 with No More Heroes: Heroes’ Paradise. In general the graphics of the HD version are pretty poor, whereas the Wii version did a lot with very little. The HD version doesn't have any of it instead most of the blood is gross looking red mist that looks unappealing more than anything and very cheaply done. The Wii version had an extremely stark style to it that had fountains of red gushing upon kills that contrasted so much with the desaturated art style. You can theoretically skip them, but you're likely going to run into it regardless on your first playthrough not thinking about it.Īlso if you're a Europe player, while it may be compelling to go with that version because we got a bloodless release on the original Wii version, the gore in the Heroes' Paradise is honestly really bad and hideous. It also screws with the already tightrope-walking pacing that NMH1 tries to uphold throughout the game. It's a neat bonus on paper but it completely de-incentivizes playing the sequel and robs them of a lot of presentation as they're fought in stock areas and undersell them in a way that makes it hard to really appreciate the work gone into them in NMH2. That game's idea of a late port addition made after NMH2's development - as the sequel was unlikely to ever get ported in the first place - was to shove in a good chunk of the better NMH2 bosses into Heroes' Paradise that you play in intermissions between several chapters. I should also mention that if you ever intend on playing 2 then you definitely should not be playing Heroes' Paradise. ![]()
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