Pixeljunk Monsters Ultimate Hd Video

  четверг 19 марта
      49

The definitive PixelJunk Monsters™ experience!Tikiman the Forest Defender is in trouble. Hordes of monsters are sweeping through his realm, hoping to chow down on his offspring – and it’s up to you to defend them.By placing weapon towers at strategic points around the landscape, you. Alien carnage dos.

About This GameTikiman the Forest Defender is in trouble. Hordes of monsters are sweeping through his realm, hoping to chow down on his offspring – and it’s up to you to defend them.By placing weapon towers at strategic points around the landscape, you can destroy the invaders and save the little ones. Collect treasure along the way to build up your arsenal and pay for new towers – countless waves of monsters are out to get the Tiki babies, so you need to be prepared to fight hard!Key Features. Play four game modes: Single player campaign, local co-op play, online co-op, and a host of additional challenges. Play Together: Local and online co-op will have you sharing your machine or playing with your friend over the net for a shared memorable experience. Online leaderboards show you how you stack up against your friends and everyone else in the world!.

Tikiman will travel across three distinct islands, spanning 47 unique environments to protect his offspring from clever monsters that attack by land and air.

Monsters supports two player co-op through both ad-hoc and online connections. Ad hoc connections are a breeze, as the game simply searches for a partner. However, connecting with a friend online is needlessly complicated. Rather than utilize your PSN friends list to make a connection, PJM requires you to create or join a chat room, which up to seven other players may join.

People who join your room can then be added to your in-game friend list, which will let you know if people are online, and you can join whatever room they're in. Unfortunately, there's no quick way to just invite a friend to your game without first joining a room.Once you've connected, the player hosting the match chooses a level to play - all levels are unlocked regardless of your progress in the campaign, which is nice. Of course, this means that progress gained in co-op doesn't translate to anything for your solo play. Both players take control of their own TikiMan, with their own pool of money to draw from. Coins picked up by a player go into their specific reserve, which means someone can definitely end up being a money hog and screw their partner out of being very useful. Upgrade crystals go into a shared pool, which mitigates this problem slightly, though I found that some people are too gung-ho about upgrading individual towers so unlocking the second tier of structures would be hard. If you're going to play online, you'll definitely want to provide some sort of voice chat to help strategize, as the TikiSpeak wheel is not very useful (and mid-battle it's almost pointless to attempt to use).Having another player around certainly helps alleviate some of the more devious difficulty spikes, but to me, the only real benefit to be drawn from the co-op is the ability to combine your dancing skills to upgrade towers faster.

Otherwise, it was mostly an exercise in preventing my partner from coin hoarding, and slogging through the same levels from the campaign. If co-op progress could be ported to single player, I might be singing a different tune. At the very least I'd at least have more rainbows.If you're already a fan of PixelJunk Monsters and can't get enough, this is an easy buy. For the rest of us, it's hard to ignore that this is simply a port of a game some of us have already played through twice. Still, it remains a solid, quirky tower defense game, and who hasn't had enough of those yet? The Co-Optimus review of PixelJunk Monsters Ultimate HD is based on the Playstation Vita version of the game.

Ultimate

Codes for review were supplied by the publisher.