

- #Dragon ball z games for gamecube skin#
- #Dragon ball z games for gamecube full#
- #Dragon ball z games for gamecube series#
#Dragon ball z games for gamecube skin#
The character models appear slightly more detailed and display more-prominent creases in skin and cloth. Though it's not the greatest-looking cel-shading we've seen, it definitely works to the game's advantage by giving the characters even more of a hand-drawn feel. Budokai had a fairly cartoony look to it, but Budokai 2 ups the ante by rendering all the characters with a cel-shading effect.

The cel-shaded graphics are nice, but they can't distract from the monotonous dragon world mode.īudokai 2 really outdoes its predecessor in the graphics department. While the fusion technique is definitely a nice touch, the game still lacks any sort of power-struggle mechanic, which is where players try to overpower one another by using huge beams of energy. The most significant addition that Budokai 2 makes to the fighting system is the fusion technique, which allows you to merge your fighter with another for a short period of time while in midfight, thus greatly increasing your power. Here, both characters unleash a flurry of punches and kicks, and mashing buttons is the only way to come out on top. If you and your opponent both try to attack each other at the same time (with certain moves), you'll enter burst mode. Players can't actually jump, but there are certain attacks that will launch your opponent into the air, at which point you can fly up to him or her and continue your battle in the sky. The game still plays like a stripped-down 3D fighter, with basic punch, kick, and energy attacks that can be strung together for more-powerful combos.

The fighting system in Budokai 2 isn't too different from the original, though it does add a few new bells and whistles.
#Dragon ball z games for gamecube series#
Whether you're already familiar with Budokai or not, the training mode is worth going through, as it explains the mechanics that are new to Budokai 2 and explains those that make the series different from other 3D fighters. Beyond the dragon world mode, Budokai 2 offers a duel mode (where you can fight against the CPU or another player in a one-off match), a single-player, ladder-style world tournament mode, and a training mode. Unfortunately, if you want to get the most out of Budokai 2's multiplayer game, you really need to play through the dragon world mode, as it's the only way to unlock many of the game's characters and stages. Also, in most cases you have to fight the same enemy several times before he is permanently vanquished, which just isn't any fun. Your sole objective, on most maps, is to find the bad guys and fight them however, the board game format doesn't bring a lot of strategy to the table. The fundamental problem with the dragon world mode is that there's really no point to it. Unfortunately, after a few levels the overlying story just sort of derails. The story for the dragon world mode takes some liberties with the Dragon Ball Z continuity by fashioning a tale that has many of the series' different villains teaming up to collect the dragon balls. In place of Budokai's story mode, Budokai 2 features the new dragon world mode, which is essentially a board game where you control a team of Dragon Ball Z heroes as they move around on a series of maps while fighting bad guys and collecting dragon balls. The crown jewel of the original was a fun, fast-paced story mode that reenacted many of the most memorable moments from DBZ, and the absence of such a mode in Budokai 2 is its biggest flaw. Like the original, Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2 is a simple, straightforward fighting game that values accessibility over depth. A few modest improvements have been made in porting Budokai 2 to the GameCube, but the game just feels late, and a little irrelevant.Ī month after Budokai 3 hits the PS2, its significantly inferior predecessor arrives on the GameCube.
#Dragon ball z games for gamecube full#
Now, a full year after it appeared on the PlayStation 2, Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2 has arrived for the GameCube. Atari churned out a sequel a year later, and though it made some improvements to the graphics, the single-player game wasn't nearly as compelling and the package suffered for it. After over a decade of poorly realized Dragon Ball Z fighting games, Atari and little-known developer DIMPS surprised many people in 2002 when it released Dragon Ball Z: Budokai for the PlayStation 2.
