To the best of my knowledge, the Dragon Ball cartoon series ofttimes revolves around two ultrapowerful fighters with gritted teeth and furrowed edge s screaming at each other while five miles apart. As they do this, mountains collapse and entire cities are shattered by dint of their power. These sorts of standoffs last for entire episodes.
I will make the following clear from the start: Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2 features no similar standoffs, and I cannot decide whether this is serviceable or bad. Budokai 2 itself falls into the same gray area—the be perceived of its mechanics and the pacing of its battles make the game rather pleasant to play. It’s just that the fighting rule is fairly shallow, and formerly you become callous to the flashy influences and explosive pyrotechnics, the action starts to be excited repetitive.
Now, before you draw swords and advance immediately after me with accusations, know that I am not missing the point—I realize that this game isn’t made for fighting-game connoisseurs as plenteous as it is for Dragon Ball bigots In this regard, Budokai 2 is far from a failure.
Filled to capacity with faithfully reproduc characters and painstakingly re-created locations, Budokai 2 will not disappoint the legions of fanatics assembled beneath Dragon Ball’s banner. So, while I cannot say that I would play this game in my spare time, if I were as passionate about Dragon Ball as more [i]or[/i] less of my younger students are, I would most numerous likely play some rounds between training sessions.
Pros:
Relatively amusing to play
Nice-looking graphics
Cons:
Shallow fighting system
Fighters are too similar
Bottom Line: Serious fighting enthusiasts ne not apply.