Kratos is also unique in that he even received his own stage, complete with stage fatality! Still, playing casually Kratos was a pretty neat addition! He had some cool moves including a lot of nods to the GOD OF WAR games, including not just a variety of familiar weapons, but even QTE button prompts. Although Kratos was generally quite well done in my opinion, the fact that he was not present in the Xbox or PC versions of the game meant he was immediately doomed to not be given a second look by competitive players. And so far, the last time MK has done a console-exclusive character owned by a platform holder (Sony, in this case). MORTAL KOMBAT had of course previously crossed over with other properties in MORTAL KOMBAT VS DC UNIVERSE, but Kratos appearing as a PS3-exclusive playable character in MK9 marked the first time a non-MK character appeared in a mainline series game. That said, given that it’s inevitable at this point, I don’t find much reason in getting too worked up about it – If we’re getting characters I didn’t ask for, I’ll at least hope they are well done and incorporated well into the game! So as we’re waiting for the latest batch of guests to show up in MK11, I thought I’d take a look back at the last decade of MORTAL KOMBAT guests. In the case of MORTAL KOMBAT, I’m definitely in the crowd who will always have a ton of legacy MK characters I’d love to see over any potential guests, and I do find it disappointing to see guests making out a full 50% of the DLC lineup in recent MKs. My personal standpoint on guest characters in general is that it can be a bit of fun, but also a bit of a bummer for sure. While by no means the first, MORTAL KOMBAT kind of ushered in the modern era of bringing in high-profile guest characters, especially as paid DLC – a practice which isn’t always well received by series fans, but unlikely to stop any time soon given that the guests consistently outsell any other character DLC. You could easily write an entire lexicon of guest characters, crossovers and cameos in video games, but today I wanted to focus on the various guests we’ve seen over the years in MORTAL KOMBAT. Although the idea mostly started with developers having their characters make unexpected appearances for a goof, with time the concept of guest characters has increasingly become a means of cross-promoting other brands. Guest characters and crossovers in fighting games is a tradition almost as old as the genre itself – Ryo Sakazaki was a secret “Dream Match” boss fight in FATAL FURY SPECIAL, Gouki was a secret playable character in X-MEN: CHILDREN OF THE ATOM, and the entire premise of THE KING OF FIGHTERS ’94 was seeing characters from a bunch of different SNK games share the screen with each other.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |