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The Legend of Korra is a third-person action game, [2] supporting single-player play only. [3] Players control Korra, the series' heroine, as she fights villains from the first two seasons of the series [4] with the bending arts, a spiritual and physical practice similar in appearance to Eastern martial arts by which practitioners move and alter the elements of water, earth, fire and air.
This is a list of video games based on cartoon television series and movies. ... Kids Next Door: Operation: S.O.D.A. ... Game Boy: The Legend of Korra: The Legend of ...
The Legend of Korra is set to music by Jeremy Zuckerman, who previously wrote the music for Avatar: The Last Airbender with Benjamin Wynn. For The Legend of Korra, Zuckerman is the sole composer while Wynn is the lead sound designer; the two collaborate with Foley artist Aran Tanchum and showrunner Mike DiMartino on the soundscape of the series ...
Janet Varney (born February 16, 1976) is an American actress, comedian, writer and producer. She is known for voicing the character of Korra in the Nickelodeon animated television series The Legend of Korra, co-starring as Sheriff Evie Barret in the television series Stan Against Evil, and a recurring role as Becca Barbara in You're the Worst.
Video games that have manga franchise characters or anime franchise characters encountering or facing off against other manga or anime franchise characters in a crossover video game include: Another Century's Episode series; Aquapazza: Aquaplus Dream Match: including Utawarerumono, Tears to Tiara, and To Heart. Bandai Namco:
A fact from The Legend of Korra (video game) appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 29 June 2014 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows: Did you know... that the action video game The Legend of Korra is intended to be visually indistinguishable from the animated TV series on which it is based?
"Korra Alone" received critical acclaim for its handling of complex themes and heavy subject matter such as Korra's post-traumatic stress disorder. [1] [2] Rick Stevenson of Looper stated the episode is a "masterpiece" for its chronicle of the "ongoing process of recovery — a process of anger, frustration, guilt, acceptance, failure, triumph, and change.", [3] while C. K. Anderson of Loud ...
[1] [2] It was succeeded by a sequel series, The Legend of Korra, which ran from 2012 to 2014. [1] The property would grow into a multi-media franchise consisting of an ongoing comics series, a prequel novel series, video games, and a live-action film. [3] [4] [5] [6]