Power attacks leave the user open, but they have a big impact if they connect and their power can be increased by charging them up. Regular attacks are the main part of the battle, and all combos begin with them. Fighters can use regular attacks, power attacks, area-based attacks, and finishing moves. The meter on the top left is Player 1 team's Win gauge and the meter on the top right is the opponent team's Win gauge, the bottom left shows the controlled character's life and stamina meters, and the bottom right has a map of the stage. To win the battle, all three sections of the WIN gauge at the top of the screen have to be filled the gauge fills one section each time an opponent is defeated.
Players should learn the lay of the land and formulate a battle plan with a character suited to it.Ī defeated character comes back after a set amount of time passes. Characters have their own playstyles too for example: Goku and Ichigo are mobile fighters that specialize in battling in the air, Luffy and Toriko prefer to rush into combat and unleash barrages of attacks against their enemies, and Kenshin and Naruto specialize in fighting two opponents at the same time. Fighters can move and fight in all directions on one of twelve 3D battlefields (which are partially destructible), each based on a location from a different Jump series. A team of two characters has the possibility to have a third support character in the battle. J-Stars Victory VS lets up to four players battle it out against one another using a gameplay and graphical style similar to those of Dragon Ball: Zenkai Battle Royale. A J-Stars Victory VS+ Compendium art book and set of PlayStation themes were offered as a pre-order bonus. The new release features an identical character roster to the original, while also incorporating game balance adjustments based on feedback from Japanese players. VS+ also marks the game's first appearance on the PlayStation 4, in addition to the PlayStation 3 and Vita as with its predecessor. Released in summer 2015, VS+ retains the original Japanese voice-over track and adds an additional single-player Arcade Mode not present in the original release. In December 2014, Bandai Namco announced that the game would be released in North America and Europe under the name J-Stars Victory VS+. The game's own theme song is "Fighting Stars", performed by Hironobu Kageyama, Hiroshi Kitadani, and Akira Kushida. He also stated that he originally hoped to include a much larger roster of characters.Ī limited edition " Anison" version of the game includes the theme songs from the player characters' television series, such as Cha-La Head-Cha-La and We Are!, as music that can be played in-game during battles. Since some of the characters do not fight in their series, their actions and motions had to be approved by each licensee after many negotiations. Producer Koji Nakajima stated that getting the rights to the multiple franchises was not hard, but rather determining which actions the characters make in the game was the most difficult part. The game's adventure mode also features other non-player characters from the various series. Several other characters were announced over the following months via the Weekly Shōnen Jump and V Jump magazines, as well as characters' transformations which would be available as special moves.
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Luffy, and Toriko, are also featured in a Toriko, One Piece, and Dragon Ball Z collaboration which aired on Fuji TV on April 7 th, 2013.Īlso in December, it was announced that fans could vote for some of the characters that they want to be included in J-Stars Victory VS. The first three characters that were unveiled and used to promote the game: Son Goku, Monkey D.
BLEACH VS NARUTO 3.2 ALL TRANSFORMATIONS SERIES
It was made to commemorate the 45th anniversary of Jump, and has been presented as the "ultimate Jump game." J-Stars Victory VS features main characters and settings from various Jump manga, both past and present, ranging from older properties such as Dragon Ball, YuYu Hakusho, Rurouni Kenshin, and Kochira Katsushika-ku Kameari Kōen-mae Hashutsujo, current long-running series such as Naruto, Bleach, One Piece, Hunter × Hunter, Toriko, Gin Tama and JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, to newer series such as Medaka Box, Assassination Classroom, and Beelzebub. The game was first announced in December 2012 under the title of "Project Versus J", in Weekly Shōnen Jump's second issue of 2013.