Tekken 8: Difference between revisions
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Believing that there is a way to regain control of his Devil powers, Jin embarks on a journey to the Kazama Sanctum, deep in the forests of Yakushima, where Jun presumably died at the hands of Ogre. Kazuya moves his remaining forces to Yakushima, intending to slow down Jin and destroy the rebel army. A coalition of Yggdrasil, the UN Independent Forces, and several combatants from the tournament, including Leroy and Reina, battle against Kazuya's G Forces, led by Nina Williams and several other tournament combatants under their payroll, while Xiaoyu singlehandedly protects Jin from mass-produced Jack-7s as he falls to deep slumber. Kazuya then appears, obliterating both sides. Lars retreats to the forest to protect Jin from Kazuya, while Reina, believing that near death would awaken some sort of power for her, lets herself be seemingly killed in the blast. |
Believing that there is a way to regain control of his Devil powers, Jin embarks on a journey to the Kazama Sanctum, deep in the forests of Yakushima, where Jun presumably died at the hands of Ogre. Kazuya moves his remaining forces to Yakushima, intending to slow down Jin and destroy the rebel army. A coalition of Yggdrasil, the UN Independent Forces, and several combatants from the tournament, including Leroy and Reina, battle against Kazuya's G Forces, led by Nina Williams and several other tournament combatants under their payroll, while Xiaoyu singlehandedly protects Jin from mass-produced Jack-7s as he falls to deep slumber. Kazuya then appears, obliterating both sides. Lars retreats to the forest to protect Jin from Kazuya, while Reina, believing that near death would awaken some sort of power for her, lets herself be seemingly killed in the blast. |
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Deep within his subconsciousness, Jin encounters his devil self, who then mocks Jin's previous failures and crimes.{{efn|name=fn3|As depicted in ''[[Tekken 6]]''.}} After a lengthy fight against himself, Jin finally accepts his devil side and regains full control of his powers, just in time to save Lars from Kazuya's attack. Kazuya plans to obliterate the island, but Jin stops the blast. After seeing visions of Jun encouraging him, Jin awakens his Angel form and attacks Kazuya. Kazuya and Jin fight all the way to space and the resulting blast from both sides purges their Devil Genes and even Azazel itself. Landing back on Earth, Jin and Kazuya engage in a final battle between father and son, with Jin emerging victorious |
Deep within his subconsciousness, Jin encounters his devil self, who then mocks Jin's previous failures and crimes.{{efn|name=fn3|As depicted in ''[[Tekken 6]]''.}} After a lengthy fight against himself, Jin finally accepts his devil side and regains full control of his powers, just in time to save Lars from Kazuya's attack. Kazuya plans to obliterate the island, but Jin stops the blast. After seeing visions of Jun encouraging him, Jin awakens his Angel form and attacks Kazuya. Kazuya and Jin fight all the way to space and the resulting blast from both sides purges their Devil Genes and even Azazel itself. Landing back on Earth, Jin and Kazuya engage in a final battle between father and son, with Jin emerging victorious. Finally free from the Devil Gene curse and having directly averted Kazumi's machinations, he thanks Jun and departs with Xiaoyu. An unconscious Kazuya is later approached by a seemingly alive Jun. |
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During credits, as the world celebrates of their freedom from G Corporation's tyranny, some of the tournament combatants, including ones formerly affiliated with Kazuya during the Yakushima fight, are shown opening food kitchens in Manhattan to help restore the city, Leo and Niklas continue their expedition to parts unknown, the Yggdrasil and UN Independent Forces celebrate their successes, and Zafina and Claudio are both shown alive, having survived their ordeal.{{efn|name=fn4|In an alternate ending, triggered if the player loses against Kazuya in his final phase, Kazuya defeats Jin and tosses him off a cliff. Back at G Corp headquarters, he remarks that he will keep fighting, affirming his belief that power controls everything. During credits, some of the tournament combatants still affiliated with Kazuya during the Yakushima fight are destroying what’s left of Manhattan and even both Yggdrasil and UN, while Nina, who resigned from G Corp during the Yakushima fight, watches the destruction from a yacht in Paris.}} |
During credits, as the world celebrates of their freedom from G Corporation's tyranny, some of the tournament combatants, including ones formerly affiliated with Kazuya during the Yakushima fight, are shown opening food kitchens in Manhattan to help restore the city, Leo and Niklas continue their expedition to parts unknown, the Yggdrasil and UN Independent Forces celebrate their successes, and Zafina and Claudio are both shown alive, having survived their ordeal.{{efn|name=fn4|In an alternate ending, triggered if the player loses against Kazuya in his final phase, Kazuya defeats Jin and tosses him off a cliff. Back at G Corp headquarters, he remarks that he will keep fighting, affirming his belief that power controls everything. During credits, some of the tournament combatants still affiliated with Kazuya during the Yakushima fight are destroying what’s left of Manhattan and even both Yggdrasil and UN, while Nina, who resigned from G Corp during the Yakushima fight, watches the destruction from a yacht in Paris.}} |
Revision as of 23:10, 30 January 2024
Tekken 8 | |
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Developer(s) | |
Publisher(s) | Bandai Namco Entertainment |
Director(s) |
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Producer(s) |
|
Programmer(s) | Kei Kudo |
Artist(s) |
|
Composer(s) |
|
Series | Tekken |
Engine | Unreal Engine 5 |
Platform(s) | |
Release | January 26, 2024 |
Genre(s) | Fighting |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Tekken 8 (Japanese: 鉄拳8) is a fighting game developed by Bandai Namco Studios and Arika. Bandai Namco Entertainment published the game for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on January 26, 2024. It is the eighth canon release and tenth overall entry in the Tekken series. The game story mode, titled The Dark Awakens, takes place six months after the events of its predecessor and focuses on the final confrontation between the main characters, father and son Kazuya Mishima and Jin Kazama, with the latter wishing to kill the former in order to end the chaos within their family lineage. The game's story features 32 former and new characters, each with their own narrative that contributes to the overall story.
Development of Tekken 8 was first teased in August 2022 at Evo 2022, with an official presentation made the following month at Sony's State of Play event. Focusing on more aggressive tones, Tekken 8 was developed using Unreal Engine 5, and it features upgraded fighting elements and systems from its predecessor. Tekken 8 also introduces brand-new mechanics, such as the "Heat" system and "Tornado" hits. Arcade Quest was another addition to their online mode, which includes tournaments, arcade features, customisable avatars, and specialised currency that is featured throughout the game.
Game tests were held in July and October 2023 to ensure overall stability before release, and a demo was made available on consoles in December of that year. The game's first season pass, which included downloadable content and new characters, was made available during the game's pre-order period. Upon its release, Tekken 8 received critical acclaim, with many critics praising the game's overall progression in the series as well as its aggressive gameplay. Several publications have noted Tekken 8 as the best game in the series since Tekken 3.
Gameplay
Tekken 8 follows the same fighting game format as previous Tekken games. Katsuhiro Harada, the game's producer, stated that Tekken 8 will be "more aggressive" than its predecessor, indicating that the system will reward players who are proactive in attacking rather than those who are defensive. To achieve this, the game introduced a new system known as "Heat". When a character unlocks the "Heat" state, they cause not only chip damage and additional movesets, but also changes the properties of some of their moves, such as a heavy guard break. These fighters can also dash cancel their moves while in the "Heat" state. Heat's timer can be stopped if fighters' movesets are used.[1] Fighters will also receive chip damage when guarding against a normal state's heavy attack or Heat State characters, allowing them to regenerate their health bars. Unlike the Tag mode-only health bar regeneration system from the Tekken Tag Tournament games, fighters' recoverable health can only be restored by attacking their opponent.[1]
Tekken 8 includes a number of technical updates and reworked features. The "Rage" system, which debuted in the previous entry, returns in Tekken 8 with new changes. For example, the "Rage Drive" has been separated and reworked as "Heat Smash", a "Heat" system super move. The "Screw" mechanism was removed from Tekken 8 and replaced with a "Tornado" extender; the system places opponents in a ground-bound state when they fall to the ground quickly. Specific stages in the game also have hazards, such as some with harder walls and floors that must be broken multiple times by fighters' harder knockout attacks, while others will cause damaged opponents to blast upward when hit by an explosive on the walls and floors.
In addition to technical improvements, Tekken 8 includes changes to other elements. Harada stated that Tekken 8 aims to provide a more cinematic fighting experience, with a focus on stage destructions and specific characters' reactions to them.[2] Furthermore, all character models and voice acting are entirely new, rather than recycled content from previous entries. The online mode includes a battle lobby called "Arcade Quest", which features arcade environments, regular online battles, and tournament matches. "Arcade Quest" allows users to customise their avatars and will use a "Fight Money" currency.[3] Tekken 8 will be powered by the next-generation Unreal Engine 5, becoming the first major fighting game to use this engine.
Tekken 8 features crossplay.[4] Enabling PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S players to play against each other for the first time in the franchise's history. Cross-Platform Play can be enabled or disabled depending on the player's preference.[5]
Plot
Six months after the death of Heihachi Mishima[a], Jin Kazama, alongside Lars Alexandersson and Lee Chaolan of the Yggdrasil Rebel Army, ambushes his father Kazuya Mishima in Manhattan, New York. However, as Jin is forced to watch Kazuya kill millions in the city, causing him to be haunted by a vision of Ogre seemingly killed his mother Jun, he loses control of his devil and is defeated, causing the operation to fail.[b] Amidst the chaos, Kazuya, now openly revealing his devil form to the public, announces a new King of Iron Fist Tournament, where representatives of various nations fight one another. The winning nation will be rewarded, while the losing nations will face destruction.
A week later, during the King of Iron Fist Tournament qualifiers, Jin, recovering from his injuries, spars with Lars, where he discovers that he no longer can activate his devil powers at will. After a brief talk with Alisa Bosconovitch, Jin makes up his mind and joins the qualifiers in Japan. There he meets Reina, a student from Mishima Polytechnic, whose combat prowess resembles Heihachi, his grandfather. Jin manages to secure a spot in the main tournament, defeating Reina and his old rival Hwoarang, occasionally showing bursts of his devil powers in combat. After the battle, Reina requests to join Jin in his fight against Kazuya. Unbeknownst to everyone, however, Reina is an illegitimate Mishima and aims to figure out how Jin and Kazuya activate their devil powers for herself.
Elsewhere in Rome, Claudio Serafino, Zafina, and Ling Xiaoyu watch the tournament. Zafina, having the demonic creature Azazel sealed in her left arm, warns Claudio that Kazuya must be stopped and that they need to seek out Jin to help him restore his full power and be reborn as a star of hope. Meanwhile, Leo Kliesen and their father Niklas arrive at the Yggdrasil base, where the latter reveals his research on Azazel and the Devil Gene. He reveals that Azazel granted the gene to ancient man, creating devils to act as its servants, and to access its power, one must have a strong desire. The Hachijo clan, which Jin and Kazuya descended from through Heihachi's late wife Kazumi is one of the servants' descendant clans.
At the main tournament in Rome, Lars meets up with the UN Independent Forces leader and Raven Unit founder Victor Chevalier who agrees to support Yggdrasil in capturing Kazuya, while independently, Claudio, Zafina, and Xiaoyu infiltrate the tournament. Jin defeats Leroy Smith, the tournament's American representative, who then teaches Jin to let go of his fears and follow his heart, while also grateful of his heroism against Kazuya's attack at his hometown, Manhattan. Kazuya ambushes Zafina, revealing that the tournament was a set-up. Breaking the seal on Zafina's arm, Kazuya resurrects Azazel and defeats it, absorbing its power to become a True Devil. In an attempt to buy time for Jin and his expanded allies to escape, Claudio uses his powers and manages to injure Kazuya, seemingly at the cost of his life. Still wrestling with Azazel's powers, Kazuya retreats.
Believing that there is a way to regain control of his Devil powers, Jin embarks on a journey to the Kazama Sanctum, deep in the forests of Yakushima, where Jun presumably died at the hands of Ogre. Kazuya moves his remaining forces to Yakushima, intending to slow down Jin and destroy the rebel army. A coalition of Yggdrasil, the UN Independent Forces, and several combatants from the tournament, including Leroy and Reina, battle against Kazuya's G Forces, led by Nina Williams and several other tournament combatants under their payroll, while Xiaoyu singlehandedly protects Jin from mass-produced Jack-7s as he falls to deep slumber. Kazuya then appears, obliterating both sides. Lars retreats to the forest to protect Jin from Kazuya, while Reina, believing that near death would awaken some sort of power for her, lets herself be seemingly killed in the blast.
Deep within his subconsciousness, Jin encounters his devil self, who then mocks Jin's previous failures and crimes.[c] After a lengthy fight against himself, Jin finally accepts his devil side and regains full control of his powers, just in time to save Lars from Kazuya's attack. Kazuya plans to obliterate the island, but Jin stops the blast. After seeing visions of Jun encouraging him, Jin awakens his Angel form and attacks Kazuya. Kazuya and Jin fight all the way to space and the resulting blast from both sides purges their Devil Genes and even Azazel itself. Landing back on Earth, Jin and Kazuya engage in a final battle between father and son, with Jin emerging victorious. Finally free from the Devil Gene curse and having directly averted Kazumi's machinations, he thanks Jun and departs with Xiaoyu. An unconscious Kazuya is later approached by a seemingly alive Jun.
During credits, as the world celebrates of their freedom from G Corporation's tyranny, some of the tournament combatants, including ones formerly affiliated with Kazuya during the Yakushima fight, are shown opening food kitchens in Manhattan to help restore the city, Leo and Niklas continue their expedition to parts unknown, the Yggdrasil and UN Independent Forces celebrate their successes, and Zafina and Claudio are both shown alive, having survived their ordeal.[d]
In a mid-credit scene, Reina is shown having survived Kazuya's attack. Vowing revenge for her father, Heihachi, she awakens into her Devil Form, revealing that she possesses the Devil Gene.
Characters
There are a total of 33 playable characters (including 1 palette swap and 1 Heat transformation exclusive form) announced for the base roster of Tekken 8. The game also has an announced first season of DLC that will add four more characters to the roster.[3] In addition, the game has two unplayable boss characters, as well as an event-only playable character.
New characters
- Angel Jin a: The angelic transformation of Jin Kazama and a purified form of his devil counterpart, imbued with the Kazama purification powers. He is playable only in The Dark Awakens story mode.
- Azucena Milagros Ortiz Castillo: A fearless happy-go-lucky Peruvian mixed martial artist and daughter of a coffee company owner.
- Jack-8: The latest upgrade of the G Corporation's Jack model, with a new voice and look.
- Reina: A purple-clad Japanese teenager who studies at Mishima Polytechnic. She is a daughter of Heihachi Mishima and possesses the Devil Gene. She practices Mishima Style Karate, in addition to Taidō.
- Victor Chevalier: A legendary war veteran, admiral, and United Nations super spy from a royal French knight lineage, and the founding grandmaster of Raven Unit with the codename of "Phantom Raven", though he does not use it. He is a close quarters battler who wields both knife and karambit for his default combat, and a technology which grants him a teleportation ability, and enhances his weaponized pistol, grenades and a sheathed katana called "Take-Ikazuchi".
Returning characters
- Alisa Bosconovitch
- Asuka Kazama
- Azazel b
- Bryan Fury
- Claudio Serafino
- Devil Jin
- Eddy Gordo c
- Feng Wei
- Hwoarang
- Jack-7 d
- Jin Kazama
- Jun Kazama
- Kazuya Mishima / Devil Kazuya e
- King II
- Kuma II
- Lars Alexandersson
- Lee Chaolan
- Leo Kliesen
- Leroy Smith
- Lili De Rochefort
- Ling Xiaoyu
- Marshall Law
- Nina Williams
- Panda
- Paul Phoenix
- Raven
- Sergei Dragunov
- Shaheen
- Steve Fox
- Yoshimitsu
- Zafina
^a Playable only in The Dark Awakens.
^b Unplayable character.
^c Downloadable character.
^d Palette swap for Jack-8.
^e Heat State transformation.
Marketing
Pre-release content
Tekken 8 was teased in August 2022 at the EVO 2022 convention, where a live tournament of Tekken 7 was held; the teaser featured an archival snippet of Kazuya Mishima from the series' first entry, which transitioned into a recent close-up visual of him.[6] The game was formally announced on September 13, 2022, at Sony's State of Play presentation.[7] The accompanying visual preview showed Mishima and his son, Jin Kazama, fighting on an undisclosed stage in the game. Katsuhiro Harada confirmed that Tekken 8 will focus on the conclusion of Kazuya and Jin's ongoing conflict.[8] Regarding the games first set of trailers, Harada commented, "This is not footage created solely for trailer purposes, but an actual real-time rendering of what is happening on the game screen."[9]
Following the Tekken World Tour 2022 finals, it was announced that Arika would be handling the game's ongoing development, with the exception of rollback netcode, including the recent Tekken 7 patch.[1] Bandai Namco Entertainment released their financial report in 2022, stating that they expected the game to be released in 2023.[10] At The Game Awards 2022 in December 2022, Bandai Namco unveiled the first Tekken 8 game trailer, which included new stages, mechanisms, and story details. The trailer included Mishima and Kazama, as well as recurring characters Paul Phoenix, King, Marshall Law, Lars Alexandersson, Jack-8, and Jun Kazama, who last appeared in Tekken 2 in 1995.[11]
Nina Williams was the game's first character trailer, released in February 2023.[12] Due to her inclusion, Williams, along with Phoenix, has the most appearances in the Tekken series, having appeared in every entry. Mishima's trailer was released the same month on Bandai Namco's YouTube channel.[13] In March 2023, character trailers for Phoenix, Law, King, Alexandersson, Jack-8, and Kazama were released.[14] Between April and May, character trailers for Ling Xiaoyu, Leroy Smith, Asuka Kazama, Lili, Hwoarang, and Bryan Fury were released.[15] In July 2023, Bandai Namco announced plans to conduct a closed network test. Prior to its official release, the test aimed to assess various game aspects such as balance, matchmaking, and overall stability. This closed network test was open to a limited number of players on a first-come, first-served basis.[16]
Between July and August 2023, three character trailers launched: Claudio Serafino, Raven, and a new character, Azucena.[17] On August 23, a special trailer premiered, featuring the majority of the game's previously announced content, as well as a release date, pre-order information, and exclusive content related to the game's features.[18] Between September and December 2023, Bandai Namco's channel featured trailers for Feng Wei, Devil Jin, new characters Victor Chevalier and Reina, Leo, Steve Fox, Dragunov and Yoshimitsu; Yoshimitsu tied Williams and Phoenix for the most entries in the Tekken series.[19] A second network test was later conducted in October 2023.[20]
On December 14, 2023, Bandai Namco released a demo off Tekken 8 for the PlayStation 5 and December 21, 2023 for the Xbox Series X/S and Microsoft Windows platforms. It includes the first Story Mode and Arcade Quest chapter, as well as Super Ghost Battle, Versus Mode, and the Gallery. Four characters (Jin Kazama, Mishima, Phoenix, and Williams) and three stages (Urban Square (Evening), Yakushima, and Sanctum) were made available.[21] Yohei Shimbori, who previously worked for Team Ninja on the Dead or Alive series, joined the project as an assistant director and producer.[22]
In January 2024, two trailers were released: the story mode and a visual that contained exclusive content for the game's Ultimate Edition package.[23] Over the course of the month, character trailers for Shaheen, Kuma, Panda, Alisa Bosconovitch, Zafina, Lee Chaolon, and Devil Jin were released.[24] To conclude the game's pre-release, a final launch trailer was released on January 19, 2024.
Packaging and additional content
Tekken 8 was released on January 26, 2024, for PlayStation 5, Microsoft Windows, and Xbox Series X/S, and marks the eighth canon release and tenth overall entry in the Tekken series.[25] To promote the games release, Bandai Namco Entertainment distributed the game in seven different formats.[26] The standard edition (both digital and physical) includes a Paul Phoenix avatar set, whereas the Launch Edition includes steel-book packaging, a burning chain metal plate, and corporation stickers.[26] The digital deluxe version includes a one-year season pass with access to downloadable content for four characters (Eddy Gordo, three of which are to be announced), while the ultimate edition (digital and physical versions) has the same features as the launch edition and digital deluxe version, as well as access to various character and avatar skins.[26]
Two collectors editions were released: a standard collectors edition and a premium collectors edition.[26] Both formats include the same content as the Ultimate Editions, as well as the game packaged in a boxset, eight glossy collector cards, two arcade tokens, a metal ring inspired by the aesthetic of character Leroy Smith, and a figurine of Jin Kazama (the premium edition includes an electrified mechanism that causes the statue to light up).[26] Bandai Namco distributed a pin badge for video game pre-orders across Asia.[27] Ultimately, the Paul Phoenix avatar set was included with all pre-orders for existing formats.[26]
The first season pass was revealed during the initial promotional activity for Tekken 8, and it would include four downloadable characters for purchase. Eddy Gordo was the first revealed character in January 2024; while his release date was not confirmed at the time, he is expected to appear in the first quarter of 2024. Following that, each remaining character will be revealed quarterly through 2024.[28]
Controversy
Advocates for accessibility have reported that Tekken 8's options for colorblind or disabled audiences could result in moderate to severe health issues including vertigo and migraines. In an article by Eurogamer, Harada was portrayed as dismissing these concerns as a misunderstanding by "very few" people who were unfamiliar with the game's accessibility options or how they appear in-game.[29] However, the article also highlighted accessibility specialist Ian Hamilton's response to Harada's apparent attempt to minimize Hamilton's concerns: "I have not 'misunderstood the accessibility options we are trying, or have only seen the video without actually trying them out in the demo play'. I understand very well, and have tried them in demo play. I'm trying to help you avoid harming players and provide a good experience."[29] The settings were updated for the release version to avoid potential health issues.[30]
Music
Tekken 8's theme song "Mastery" is performed by The Last Rockstars.[31] An official soundtrack was pre-released digitally on the same day as the game’s release, and will be released physically in four CDs on March 13, 2024.
Reception
Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
Metacritic | (PC) 93/100[32] (PS5) 90/100[33] (XSXS) 87/100[34] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
Digital Trends | [35] |
Eurogamer | [36] |
Game Informer | 8.25/10[37] |
GameSpot | 8/10[38] |
GamesRadar+ | [39] |
Hardcore Gamer | [40] |
IGN | 9/10[41] |
Jeuxvideo.com | 18/20[42] |
NME | [43] |
PC Gamer (US) | 89/100[44] |
PCGamesN | 9/10[45] |
Push Square | [46] |
Shacknews | 10/10[47] |
Video Games Chronicle | [50] |
VG247 | [48] |
VideoGamer.com | 10/10[49] |
Tekken 8 received "universal acclaim" from critics for the PC and PS5 versions, while the Xbox Series X/S version received "generally favorable reviews", according to review aggregator website Metacritic.[32][33][34] Several publications argued that Tekken 8 was the best offering from the parent franchise. GamesRadar+ rated it five stars, stating that "proves that plenty of depth makes for a vibrant fighter, justifying its current-gen exclusivity to deliver a skull-thrasher that really feels like an evolution rather than a simple update."[39] Hardcore Gamer praised the game as "bold" and highlighted Bandai Namco's sense of innovation, describing it as "one of the greatest fighting games of all time."[40] Shacknews compared the game to its previous entries and concluded: "Tekken 8 is it, and looks set to carry that torch for years to come."[47] Video Games Chronicle opined that Tekken 8 is "up there with Tekken 3 as one of the most exciting high points in the series."[50]
Critics praised the game's improved visuals and overall progression from previous instalments. Eurogamer Germany wrote, "It looks great after the graphical redesign and is packed with game variants and training options as well as clever ideas."[36] Despite praising the graphics, GamePro Germany felt that the game lacked options for "single-player fans."[51] Despite minor "tweaks" in customisation, IGN felt that "Tekken 8 manages to stand out as something special."[41] Jeuxvideo.com compared the game favourably to other entries in the fighting game genre, saying "Its new features in terms of gameplay are enough to stand out from previous opuses and hold its own against its competitors".[42] NME praised its visuals and cinematography, writing, "Tekken 8 has lots to offer both new and veteran players. The cinematic, over-the-top storyline is gorgeous and ends in a thematically brilliant fight".[43]
Minor criticism was directed at specific modes, as well as the game's overall innovation. PC Gamer specifically pointed out the lack of offline modes which were featured in previous games, such as Team Battle, Survival, and Time Attack.[44] Gamer.nl wrote that "The new Tekken does not want to reinvent the wheel, but relies entirely on the rock-solid gameplay for which the series is known."[52] 4Players.de described the modes as the game's only weakness, while also praising the game's "high-quality fighting action."[53] Despite praise for the game's "flashy combos and air juggles", Game Informer wrote that "Tekken 8 doesn't reach the heights of recent rivals like Street Fighter 6 and Mortal Kombat 1."[37] GLHF of Sports Illustrated came to a mixed conclusion, believing it was "designed primarily to appease an existing audience, not court a new one."[54]
The game topped the charts in the UK, outperforming Street Fighter 6.[55]
Notes
- ^ As depicted in Tekken 7.
- ^ As depicted in Tekken 3.
- ^ As depicted in Tekken 6.
- ^ In an alternate ending, triggered if the player loses against Kazuya in his final phase, Kazuya defeats Jin and tosses him off a cliff. Back at G Corp headquarters, he remarks that he will keep fighting, affirming his belief that power controls everything. During credits, some of the tournament combatants still affiliated with Kazuya during the Yakushima fight are destroying what’s left of Manhattan and even both Yggdrasil and UN, while Nina, who resigned from G Corp during the Yakushima fight, watches the destruction from a yacht in Paris.
References
- ^ a b c Nelva, Giuseppe (February 5, 2023). "Tekken 8 Reveals Nina Williams, Gameplay, In-Depth Mechanics Explanation, & On-Site Closed Alpha". Tech Raptor. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ Borger, Will (December 9, 2022). "Tekken 8: desglose del tráiler con el productor ejecutivo Katsuhiro Harada" [Tekken 8: Trailer Breakdown with Executive Producer Katsuhiro Harada]. IGN Latin America (in Spanish). Retrieved December 12, 2022.
- ^ a b Gordon, Justin (August 23, 2023). "Shaheen, Steve, Leo, Yoshimitsu, Dragunov and Kuma revealed for Tekken 8, releasing January 26, 2024". Eventhubs. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
- ^ Jones, Anthony (December 27, 2023). "Will Tekken 8 Be Crossplay?". The Escapist. Retrieved January 30, 2024.
- ^ Bowen, Tom (January 25, 2024). "Tekken 8 Crossplay Guide (How to Enable / Disable Crossplay)". Game Rant. Retrieved January 30, 2024.
- ^ New Tekken Official Teaser Announcement (Trailer). GameSpot. August 7, 2022 – via YouTube.
- ^ Bailey, Kat (September 15, 2022). "Tekken 8: The Exclusive First Interview with Katsuhiro Harada - 'A Turning Point'". IGN. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
- ^ Marks, Tom (September 13, 2022). "Tekken 8 Officially Revealed". IGN. Retrieved September 14, 2022.
- ^ Middler, Jordan (September 13, 2022). "Tekken 8 is official: First PS5 gameplay revealed". Video Games Chronicle. Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ Murray, Sean (February 8, 2023). "Tekken 8 Is Planned To Launch By March 2024". TheGamer. Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ Tekken 8 - State of Play Sep 2022 Announcement Trailer | PS5 Games (Trailer). PlayStation. September 13, 2022 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Tekken 8 – Nina Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ "Tekken 8 – Kazuya Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Character trailers released in March 2023:
- "Tekken 8 – Paul Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Marshall Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – King Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Lars Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Jack-8 Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Jun Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Character trailers released between April-May 2023:
- "Tekken 8 – Xiaoyu Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Leroy Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Asuka Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Lili Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Hwoarang Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Bryan Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Morbhatt, Muskan (June 9, 2023). "Tekken 8 Closed Network Test in July: Register Now". OtakuZasshi. Retrieved June 9, 2023.
- ^ Character trailers released between July-August 2023:
- "Tekken 8 – Claudio Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Raven Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Azucena Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ "Tekken 8 – Release date and exclusive content". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Character trailers released between September-December 2023:
- "Tekken 8 – Feng Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – The Return of Legends Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Victor Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Reina Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Leo Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Steve Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Dragonav Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Yoshimitsu Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Romano, Sal (September 19, 2023). "Tekken 8 adds Feng Wei, closed beta test set for October 20 to 23". Gematsu. Retrieved December 13, 2023.
- ^ Romano, Sal (December 12, 2023). "Tekken 8 demo launches December 14 for PS5, December 21 for Xbox Series and PC". Gematsu. Retrieved December 13, 2023.
- ^ Nelva, Giuseppe (December 17, 2023). "Dead or Alive 5 and 6 Director Yohei Shimbori Is Back, Working on Tekken 8". IGN. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Story trailer and Ultimate Edition trailer:
- "Tekken 8 – Official Story Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Ultimate Edition Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Character trailers released between January 2024:
- "Tekken 8 – Shaheen Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Kuma Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Panda Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Alisa Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Zafina Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Lee Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 – Devil Jin Gameplay Trailer". Bandai Namco Entertainment (via YouTube). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^
- "Tekken 8 - Playstation". Playstation Store. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Tekken 8 on Steam". Steam. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- "Buy Tekken 8". Xbox. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "Tekken 8 - Shop Now". Bandai Namco Entertainment. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ "Tekken 8". Bandai Namco Entertainment (Asia). Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Howard, Norris (January 16, 2024). "Eddy Gordo Is Tekken 8's First DLC Character". Esports Illustrated. Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ a b Blake, Vikki (December 31, 2023). "Tekken 8 director says players raising accessibility concerns 'have misunderstood the options'". Eurogamer. Retrieved January 3, 2024.
- ^ Scullion, Chris (January 24, 2024). "Tekken 8's potentially harmful accessibility options have been updated before release". Video Games Chronicle. Retrieved January 25, 2024.
- ^ Cirone, David (November 22, 2023). "THE LAST ROCKSTARS announce new song 'MASTERY' for Tekken 8". J-Generation. Retrieved November 23, 2023.
- ^ a b "Tekken 8 for PC Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ a b "Tekken 8 for PlayStation 5 Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ a b "Tekken 8 for Xbox Series X Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ Epps, DeAngelo (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review: Beat Up Your Dad Simulator 2K24". Digital Trends. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Parker, Lewis (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review - a complex series transformed into a welcoming one". Eurogamer. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Stewart, Marcus (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 Review - Aggressively Absurd". Game Informer. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Fanelli, Jason (January 25, 2024). "Tekken 8 Review - The Heat Of Battle". GameSpot. Retrieved January 25, 2024.
- ^ a b Taylor-Kent, Oscar (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review: "We're in the Golden Age for fighting games, and Tekken is the king"". GamesRadar+. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Wells, Cory (January 23, 2024). "Review: Tekken 8". Hardcore Gamer. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Barrier, Ronny (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 Review". IGN. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b AymericLallee (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 vient défier Street Fighter 6, un duel au sommet pour deux jeux vidéo de combat uniques, mais véritablement incontournables !" (in French). Jeuxvideo.com. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
- ^ a b van der Velde, Issy (January 23, 2024). "'Tekken 8' review: from zero to hero". NME. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Taylor, Mollie (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review". PC Gamer. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Vaz, Christian (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review – a gold standard for 3D fighters". PCGamesN. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Ramsey, Robert (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 Review (PS5)". Push Square. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Denzer, TJ (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review: Delightfully devilish, Kazuya". Shacknews. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Makar, Connor (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review: Back(dash), and better than ever". VG247. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Raisbeck, Alex (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 review – Excellent!". VideoGamer.com. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Scullion, Chris (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 is a sensational sequel". Video Games Chronicle. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Molke, David (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 im Test: Die Fighting Game-Legende meldet sich eindrucksvoll zurück" [Tekken 8 in the test: The fighting game legend returns impressively]. GamePro (in German). Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ "Review: Tekken 8 is zowel vertrouwd als intens en spectaculair" [Review: Tekken 8 is as familiar as it is intense and spectacular]. gamer.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ Menk, Gerrit (January 23, 2024). "Tekken 8 - Test, Prügeln & Kämpfen" [Tekken 8 - Test, Brawl & Fight]. 4Players (in German). Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ Aubrey, Dave (January 23, 2024). "Review: Tekken 8 is a great Tekken game, but not much more". Video Games on Sports Illustrated. Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ https://metro.co.uk/2024/01/29/tekken-8-launch-sells-twice-street-fighter-6-uk-charts-20189145/amp/
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