316whatupz | Crappy Games: Way Of The Hado - Ultra Street Fighter II (NSW) @316whatupz | Uploaded July 2021 | Updated October 2024, 2 hours ago.
This is the return of Crappy Games series that I used to do long ago. But this time, it is highlighting a specific mode from a game. This is my playthrough of Way Of The Hado mode from "Ultra Street Fighter II" for the Nintendo Switch.
Review: The Way Of Hado mode is a motion controlled exclusive mode to Ultra Street Fighter II where Ryu battles his way through various swarms of minions to get to fight M. Bison.
Controls: Boy, do they suck. You are given an optional tutorial on how to use the JoyCons to perform three different moves (Hadoken, Uppercut, and Tatsumaki aka Ryu's Spinning Kick). The problem here is that the JoyCons don't register the exact move you want to perform even when you perform the movement correctly and hit the right buttons. A lot of time you will end up performing a move that you don't want to do.
Graphics: For what this game is, they are decent. There is only one environment available in this mode, so you are basically in the same place throughout the game.
Sound: "Hadoken!!! Hah!!" That is pretty much all you will hear. There is background music, but I didn't pay much attention to it throughout this playthrough.
Gameplay: Very mobile game, much information. But seriously, it is basically just swarms of jabronis coming at you and having to improve your skills as you drag yourself into playing round after round of enemies just for Ryu to become powerful enough to defeat M. Bison. There are three difficulties to choose from but only Expert is where you fight M. Bison. Once you have maxed out all of your skills, Expert mode becomes very easy. Then there is the Endless mode, which is pretty much Expert mode but with endless rounds of swarms of enemies and M. Bison after each round. The only positive thing about gameplay is that it will burn some calories out of you if you playthrough it in one shot, like I did here.
Overall (4/10): I really don't see myself ever coming back to this. It is not the worst that I have played, but it is nowhere near decent as well.
Timestamps:
Beginning: 0:00
Hado Training: 0:30
Stage Battle mode: 8:56
The final part of Stage Battle (you're welcome): 44:35
Endless Battle mode: 46:21
The end of no return: 55:43
This is the return of Crappy Games series that I used to do long ago. But this time, it is highlighting a specific mode from a game. This is my playthrough of Way Of The Hado mode from "Ultra Street Fighter II" for the Nintendo Switch.
Review: The Way Of Hado mode is a motion controlled exclusive mode to Ultra Street Fighter II where Ryu battles his way through various swarms of minions to get to fight M. Bison.
Controls: Boy, do they suck. You are given an optional tutorial on how to use the JoyCons to perform three different moves (Hadoken, Uppercut, and Tatsumaki aka Ryu's Spinning Kick). The problem here is that the JoyCons don't register the exact move you want to perform even when you perform the movement correctly and hit the right buttons. A lot of time you will end up performing a move that you don't want to do.
Graphics: For what this game is, they are decent. There is only one environment available in this mode, so you are basically in the same place throughout the game.
Sound: "Hadoken!!! Hah!!" That is pretty much all you will hear. There is background music, but I didn't pay much attention to it throughout this playthrough.
Gameplay: Very mobile game, much information. But seriously, it is basically just swarms of jabronis coming at you and having to improve your skills as you drag yourself into playing round after round of enemies just for Ryu to become powerful enough to defeat M. Bison. There are three difficulties to choose from but only Expert is where you fight M. Bison. Once you have maxed out all of your skills, Expert mode becomes very easy. Then there is the Endless mode, which is pretty much Expert mode but with endless rounds of swarms of enemies and M. Bison after each round. The only positive thing about gameplay is that it will burn some calories out of you if you playthrough it in one shot, like I did here.
Overall (4/10): I really don't see myself ever coming back to this. It is not the worst that I have played, but it is nowhere near decent as well.
Timestamps:
Beginning: 0:00
Hado Training: 0:30
Stage Battle mode: 8:56
The final part of Stage Battle (you're welcome): 44:35
Endless Battle mode: 46:21
The end of no return: 55:43