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Combat, on the other hand, is kind of tedious. The new control scheme helps a lot - somehow, it's just more fun to swing your arms around than to mash buttons - but eventually, you'll start to realize you're just busting out the same slash combos over and over again. It's far more satisfying to just bust out stealthy "speed kills" whenever possible, which let you sneak up on enemies and hack them to death through a series of timed swings. (These are also instrumental to winning the handful of boss battles, so you know.)
Fighting gets a hell of a lot more interesting when the Dark Prince shows up. A by-product of the internal struggle between the original charming, naive Princeand the "battle-hardened outcast"he became in Warrior Within, the Dark Prince is a shock-hairedwraith with a razor-sharp whip imbedded in his forearm. Most of the time, he's just a sneering voice in the Prince's head, but he takes over when the story calls for it.
The problem with the Dark Prince is that he loses health constantly, and can only heal with magical sand - which, conveniently, is stored in enemy torsos and random bits of scenery. So if the Prince's segments aren't frantic enough for you, turning into the Dark Prince gives the game more urgency and a sharper focus on combat as you plow ahead as fast as possible, looking for the next enemy to get your sand fix from. It's not all bad, though; the Dark Prince's chain whip makes fighting (and death-from-above speed kills) a lot more interesting, especially now that you get to swing it around with the Nunchuk.
More info
Genre | Action |
Description | The best Prince of Persia since Sands of Time returns with cool motion controls and not much else |
Platform | "Wii","PSP" |
US censor rating | "Teen","Teen" |
UK censor rating | "","" |
Release date | 1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK) |
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