Marvel Ultimate Alliance 2 Review
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The game is cleverly designed so that you're constantly progressing and bettering yourself, be it with the unlocking of new characters, power upgrades, new abilities, passive buffs or the basic pleasure of levelling up, you always feel as if something shiny and new is just around the corner. And if it's a new character, then that means new Fusion Power combinations.
Beyond this, MUA fans won't find much new in the way of gameplay. It's still a linear dungeon crawl with awful dialogue and a pointless three-pronged conversation mechanic (Mass Effect this is not). The plot's new, of course, but will be familiar to readers of Marvel comics. It's a combination of two popular mega story arcs, the Civil War and the Secret War. The game begins in Latveria, the fictional European country that Doctor Doom calls home. S.H.I.E.L.D chief Nick Fury is leading an unsanctioned invasion, hoping to deal a blow to the terrorist state once and for all. He gets his way. The first level sees you razing the place to the ground and a boss fight with The Tinkerer. Job done.
Flash forward a year and New York is under attack. It's the Latverians gunning for revenge for Fury's invasion. You repel the attack, but not before hundreds of civilians are killed. Public opinion forces the government to impose the Superhuman Registration Act. What this means is, about a third of the way through the game, you, the player, are asked to pick a side. Will you fight for the government, rounding up superheroes who refuse to tow the party line? Or will you go underground, fighting against those who you once called friends?
The set up is a clear allegory for the September 11 attacks and current civil liberties issues, although it's executed in stereotypically comic book fashion. We're not saying it's The Odyssey, or anything other than an excuse to beat the crap out of other characters in the Marvel universe, but it's better than what we might have had for a plot. And at the very least it adds replayablity, because your choice determines what superheroes you'll have available to play with, what characters you'll unlock, and the ending of the game.
A nod must go to the graphics. Up close the game looks positively ugly, with bizarre-looking face animations and poor quality textures. But when the game's viewed in the dungeon crawl perspective, the one you'll view 99 per cent of the game in, MUA2 at times looks hugely impressive. Almost everything in the game can be destroyed or picked up and lobbed at enemies. The Hulk, for example, can pick up ambulance and send it spiralling towards a group of bad guys like a blue and white meteor. There's always loads going on, be it explosions, flying enemy shields, Fusion Powers or just scores of goons on screen at once. It all combines to form an impressively destructive spectacle. Graphics are often rubbish in superhero games. Developer Vicarious Visions should be applauded for its work in this regard.
MUA fans may bemoan the lack of change, and they'd have a point. Bar the Fusion Powers there's little new going on here. But it's still a fun, albeit brainless romp that's sure to please Marvel fanboys. If you go in not expecting to play the game of the year then you're going to get a hell of a lot of fun out of MUA2.
VideoGamer.com Score
8Score out of 10- Co-op destruction
- Marvel!
- Fusion Powers
- Repetitive combat




User Comments
Wido@ wyp100
wyp100@ Wido
The main motivation to replay the story mode is to make a different decision when choosing civil war sides. It leads to different missions and access to different heroes.
Once you finish it on the normal difficulty, then there's legend difficulty. There's loads of challenges and things to collect, too, if that's your thing.
After all that, it's the DLC that'll keep you interested.
Hope that helps.
Wido
I'm speaking on behalf of a friend and hes not sure whether to get this game or not. Now, seeing as your the man for this game because it obviously seems you know your Marvel Universe.
Is there anything more to offer than just replaying the storyline with different hereos?
wyp100@ CheekyLee
Thanks.
pblive
guyderman
http://www.silver-surfer.us/Top10list/Top10List.htm
CheekyLee
pblive
Yes, I'm resisting the urge to wade in.
Are the most powerful heroes the best? Probably not, I find that those who are weaker have more character. Spider-man isn't the strongest but he's just such a great character, as are many of the Marvel/DC heroes who aren't tooled to the max with power.
Anyway, looks a good game, might get it at some point.
Karlius
Mr_Ninjutsu
Spiderman? Oh rly? He was voted best superhero on some MTV programme.
rbevanx
Sorry guys my bad.
rbevanx
guyderman
Anyone who gives Cap a kick to the family jewels is the best of the best IMO!
rbevanx@ IndoorHeroes
IndoorHeroes