Def Jam: Fight for NY
Def Jam: Fight for NY | |
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Developer(s) | AKI Corporation/EA Canada |
Publisher(s) | EA Games |
Platform(s) | PlayStation 2, GameCube, Xbox |
Release | US: September 20, 2004 JP: February 24, 2005 (PS2) |
Genre(s) | Fighting |
Mode(s) | Single player, multiplayer |
Def Jam: Fight for NY is the sequel of Def Jam Vendetta, a hip hop-influenced 3D fighting game released for the PlayStation 2, Xbox, and GameCube. The game features several rappers, including Method Man, Snoop Dogg, and Busta Rhymes, as well as the voices and likeness of other actors and celebrities, among them actor Omar Epps, punk rocker Henry Rollins, and Kimora Lee Simmons.
The game was spun-off into a 2006 PlayStation Portable game called Def Jam Fight for NY: The Takeover.
Gameplay
The gameplay is expanded from the original game, which was primarily a wrestling game. Fighters can choose from up to five styles, and many fighters have more than one.
Styles
- Street Fighting
- Kickboxing
- Martial Arts
- Wrestling
- Submissions
The game emphasizes strikes (punches and kicks) more, as well as proper use of the arena's environment and the surrounding crowd. Tossing the opponent against the wall (or other barriers/obstacles) gives fighters the opportunity to inflict massive damage to their opponent by tossing or slamming them into the wall headfirst, or using other features of the environment, such as slamming a door or gate in their face.
The crowd will shove a fighter back into combat if he is thrown into them or gets too close, and will sometimes hold a fighter, leaving them open to attack. Some spectators carry weapons, and will offer them to a fighter with enough momentum, or even attack a fighter if the guy next to them holds him.
Momentum is gained by successfully performing moves (repeated moves gain less momentum), countering, and taunting the opponent. The rate at which momentum is gained is effected by the fighter's Charisma, which is set for most fighters. Created fighters can set their own charisma with a combination of clothes, tattoos, and jewelry; the more expensive, the better. A fighter with a good set of clothes, extensive tattoos, or laden with bling can often fill their momentum meter in just a few moves.
When the momentum meter is full, a fighter can activate it, which results in a Blazin' Taunt (a dramatic shout of rage and a graphical fire effect on the meter). In this state, the fighter is said to be "Blazin", and can pull off a Blazin' Move, a powerful and brutal attack personalized for each character. A created character can learn every single Blazin' Move in the game, but can only have up to four usable at any one time.
With the focus taken from wrestling, the only way to win a fight is through Knock Out or Submission. A character can be made to submit by putting them into submission holds until the health bar of a single body part (legs, arms, etc...) is depleted. A character can be knocked out in many ways, but cannot be knocked out until their life meter is flashing red:
- Haymaker Punch (Street Fighting).
- Kick Boxer (Kickboxing).
- Ghetto Fly (Martial Arts).
- Smackdown (Wrestling).
- Submit (Submission).
- Slammed against a wall or other obstacle.
- Struck with a weapon.
- Double teamed by the opponent and a spectator.
- Double teamed by two opponents
- Hit by a Blazin' Move.
- Some stages have special ways of defeating opponents, such as throwing them into the path of a moving train.
Story Mode
Follows the narrative of a created character fighting his way through the New York Underground. Winning matches rewards the player with cash, which can be used in different shops to buy clothes, haircuts, tattoos, and jewelry (from Jacob "The Jeweler" Arabo), as well as Development points, which can be used at the local gym (run by Rollins) to increase your fighter's skills, or to purchase and set up new Blazin' Moves and up to two additional fighting styles.
Winning matches also unlocks the fighters you defeat, as well as their Blazin' Move, and often the jewelry they may wear. You can have the jewelery of Sean Paul, Crack (Fat Joe), Xzibit, Crazy Legs, Lil' Flip, Def Jam Records, Roc-a-fella Records, State Property, and many others (except for some particular signature pieces such as the medallions worn by Flava Flav or Modify it like Ghostface Killah's Sun God Plate Gold and Diamond piece.), the fighters may be used in Battle Mode, while their moves and jewelry may be purchased and used by the player.
Battle Mode
Battle Mode is the versus mode of the game, allowing up to four players to fight at once. It has several sub-modes:
- One on One - A single match between two fighters.
- Team Match - A two on two brawl that ends only when both fighters on a team are knocked out or submited.
- Free For All - A match between three or four fighters, where it's every man or woman for themselves.
- Cage Match - No crowd interference, but the cage itself can be used to attack the opponent.
- Ring Out Match - The wooden barriers lining the ring can eventually be broken, and the match is won by throwing the opponent through the resulting gap.
- Inferno Match - A battle in a burning building. Contact with the ring of fire damages fighters immediately. In addition, bits of flaming debris will sometimes fall from the ceiling.
- Demolition Match - Two SUVs form part of the arena, and fighters can use each other to mess them up. The match can end by totaling the opponent's car, (Player 1 - Black Cadillac Escalade) (Player 2/CPU - Silver/Gray Hummer).
- Subway Match - Fight in a Subway terminal. At regular intervals, a train will roll past. Fighters can be thrown or knocked off the platform, and into the path of the train, if you time it correctly. Naturally, throwing your opponent into the path of a moving train takes them out of the fight immediately, no matter how much health they have.
- Window Match - Three large windows line one side of the arena, and a four-story drop awaits the person slammed through one of them.
Notably, as with the preceding Def Jam: Vendetta, many of the move animations were held over from AKI's Nintendo 64 wrestling game, WWF No Mercy. This results in many of wrestling-oriented characters using the finishers of famous wrestlers: for instance, one of the circuit fighters often executes The Undertaker's Last Ride, and Crack (Fat Joe's character) almost exclusively performs Triple H's Pedigree. Matt Hardy's Twist of Fate and Jeff Hardy's Swanton Bomb can be used for created characters.
Story
The game's story picks up immediately after the first game. D-Mob (Christopher Judge), the underworld boss from the first game, has just been arrested, when the car transporting him gets broadsided by an SUV. The SUV's driver rescues D-Mob from police custody and drives off.
Unlike the four pre-set characters from the first game, the player is allowed to create his own character, in a sequence where the cops who lost D-Mob are asked to describe the player to a police sketch artist. The player can also choose between several voice types as well, unlike the previous hero(es), who never spoke in the game. The voice selection is not available in the GameCube version of the game.
At first, the action will center around shoring up D-Mob's suddenly shaky empire, which has been rocked by the events of the first game, D-Mob's near arrest, and the ruthless Crow (Snoop Dogg), who uses this period of uncertainty to try to take over D-Mob's turf. The fights take place in "clubs." When a fighter for either side manages to either fight off all comers in a club, or simply a captain holding it, (or both), he is said to have taken it for his side, and control changes to that side. In the very beginning, the player will be fighting other fighters in D-Mob's group as he gets started, then will quickly be called upon after a few victories to defend clubs that are under attack from fighters that Crow is sending to try to take them, and later go on the offensive to attempt to take clubs from Crow.
The player will also need to fight for respect in D-Mob's crew. Many of D-Mob's lieutenants and top fighters will doubt or be disdainful of the player's skills and abilities at first, most notably Sticky Fingaz, who begins as D-Mob's top fighter until the player begins to replace him, and slightly less vocally by others like Ludacris. Fortunately, the player is quickly befriended by and taken under the wing of Blaze (Method Man), who is not only one of D-Mob's top lieutenants but also a major advisor to the underworld boss.
The player can also gain a girlfriend (after fighting for her), he can get the girlfriend he wanted, or if he loses, another one, and later, she ends up in a catfight with Carmen Electra over him. The player can then choose to keep his current girl, or switch to Electra.
Soon after, D-Mob arranges a match against the legendary Ice-T to prove yourself to the rest of his crew. Afterwards Crow himself crashes the party and openly announces his intentions to take over D-Mob's turf, and begins offering top dollar for D-Mob's fighters to switch to his side. With Crow seemingly having an edge in both money and the sheer number of fighters, the situation looks grim and many of D-Mob's men (such as WC) desert him after this incident.
After this the war heats up, but even though the odds seem to be against D-Mob's group, the rise of the player through the ranks, and his ability not only to capture clubs from Crow but also from third party groups, (such as the Triad-run Dragon House, or the Babylon, run by a Jamacian mob in Brooklyn), begins to offset Crow's advantages in cash and fighters.
Eventually, Crow proposes a winner-take-all bout between Crack (Fat Joe), one of Crow's best and most feared fighters, and D-Mob's "best man." D-Mob, with encouragement from Sticky, accepts this deal, only to infuriate Sticky when he picks the player as his representative. Sticky storms off angrily, but D-Mob encourages the player not to worry about it and keep his mind on the fight. The player wins a cage match against Crack right in the heart of Crow's territory, but as he, Blaze, and D-Mob are celebrating in their limo, (a celebration which includes D-Mob giving the player his personal pendant and formally adopting him into D-Mob's inner circle), a car drives alongside, and gunfire erupts from the window. D-Mob and Blaze are injured, and Sticky, who participated in the attack, is revealed to have joined up with Crow. After a fight against Crow's enforcer and gunman Trejo (Danny Trejo), the player returns to the limo, where a wounded D-Mob orders him and Blaze to escape from the rapidly-approaching police.
D-Mob is arrested, and Blaze takes over in his stead, using the player and Blaze's friend Doc (who until now had been sleeping the whole time) to take all of Crow's clubs in retaliation. During this time, the player fights in a team tournament, and must choose between two fighters whose respect he earned early in his career: Ice-T and O.E. (Omar Epps). The player chooses one of them and fights the team of whatever fighter you did not choose as your partner and Magic (Busta Rhymes).
As the player continues to rack up victiories and chips away at Crow's empire, Crow continually tries to get the player to join his side, but fails. Finally, he resorts to kidnapping the player's girlfriend and forcing him to retake all the clubs he has earned for D-Mob's side, one by one, an apparent betrayal that angers the rest of D-Mob's crew. Crow warns the player that if he tells anyone the real reason for his change of sides (to keep his girlfriend alive), Crow will kill her.
With the last club won in a fight against Doc (Redman) (before which a distraught Blaze angrily takes D-Mob's pendant from the player), Crow claims to have one final task for the player. The scene is moved to an empty scrapyard, where the player finds Blaze brutally beaten, the final task being to finish him off. The player refuses, and knocks out WC. He and Blaze then battle Crack and Magic.
After the fight, the player learns where his girlfriend is being held, and that Crow never planned on letting her live. He and Blaze rush over to an abandoned factory, where Sticky is about to set the entire building on fire. The player fights him in the burning building. After he wins the fight, he can be seen taking his girlfriend out of the burning building before it collapses. Her fate is left for the player's imagination.
The enraged player and Blaze confront Crow at his headquarters, backed up by Crack and WC, whose respect they earned, and the rest of D-Mob's crew, whom Blaze had cleared the player's good name with. As a rumble breaks out with Crow's gang, the player rushes to face Crow in a final showdown. After a brief stand off involving a gun, given to you by a repentant Magic, Crow stabs you in the back with a dagger. After the battle, Crow is thrown through the window and to his apparent death. Blaze gives the player back D-Mob's Pendant for restoring order to the code, and they escape as the police arrive.
Fighters in alphabetical order
- Baby Chris
- David Banner
- Baxter
- Method Man as Blaze
- Bless
- Bo
- BoneCrusher
- Bubba Sparxxx
- Capone
- Carmen Electra
- Chiang
- Cindy J
- Comp
- Fat Joe as Crack
- Crazy Legs
- Snoop Dogg as Crow
- Cruz
- D-Mob
- Dan G
- Redman as Doc
- Elephant Man
- Erick Sermon
- FAM-LAY
- Flava Flav
- Freeway
- Ghostface Killah
- Havoc
- House
- Ice-T
- Jacob
- Jervis
- Joe Budden
- Kimora
- Lauren
- Lil' Flip
- Lil' Kim
- Ludacris
- Mack 10
- Busta Rhymes as Magic
- Manny
- Masa
- Meca
- Memphis Bleek
- N.O.R.E.
- Nyne
- Omar Epps as O.E.
- Pockets
- Prodigy
- Henry Rollins
- Rome
- Santos
- Scarface
- Sean Paul
- Shaniqua
- Shawnna
- Skull
- Slick Rick
- Snowman
- Solo
- Starks
- Sticky Fingaz
- Stingray
- Suspect
- Teck
- Danny Trejo
- Trick
- Warren G
- WC
- Xzibit
Awards
- E3 2004 Game Critics Awards: Best Fighting Game[1].
External links
References
- ^ "2005 Winners". gamecriticsawards.com.