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Musou Attacks return from previous games, and their mechanics are identical to Dynasty Warriors series games before Dynasty Warriors 6. The player also has access to an airborne Musou Attack, which depletes only a small portion of the Musou gauge. New to Dynasty Warriors 9 is the Stamina Gauge, a gauge that gradually replenishes until full. The ...
Dynasty Warriors 2 is the game usually associated with these terms; many similar games are often called Dynasty Warrior clones. Pages in category "Crowd-combat fighting games" The following 56 pages are in this category, out of 56 total.
The sequel of the first PSP game, Dynasty Warriors Vol. 2 was released in 2006. In 2007, Koei released Dynasty Warriors DS: Fighter's Battle for the Nintendo DS. Another PSP game based on Dynasty Warriors 6, Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce was released in 2009, which was followed up by a sequel, Shin Sangokumusō: Multi Raid 2 in 2010.
Dynasty Warriors is a series of beat 'em up video games by Koei and Omega Force. It is a spin-off series to Sangokushi , another video game series by Koei. Pages in category "Dynasty Warriors"
The Warriors series, known in Japan as the Musō (無双, lit. "Unrivaled") series, is an action game series created by Omega Force and published by Koei Tecmo. The meta-series contains various series, such as the Dynasty Warriors games, the One Piece: Pirate Warriors games, the Warriors Orochi games, the Samurai Warriors games, and various spin-offs.
Features characters from Ninja Gaiden, Dead or Alive, Nioh, Samurai Warriors, Dynasty Warriors, Toukiden: The Age of Demons, Deception, Haruka: Beyond the Stream of Time, Nights of Azure, Rio, Opoona, Atelier, and Samurai Cats: Warriors Orochi: Dynasty Warriors and Samurai Warriors: Warriors Orochi 3
Dragon Quest Heroes mixes the hack-and-slash combat of Koei Tecmo's Dynasty Warriors series of video games with the characters, monsters, universe, and lore from Square Enix's Dragon Quest series. The game is much more heavy on RPG elements than most of Omega Force's other titles.
The game features hundreds of enemies onscreen at any given time, and borrows heavily from other video games of the genre, most notably from the Dynasty Warriors and Kingdom Under Fire series. The game was released in Japan on April 20, 2006, and for other markets in August. A sequel, Ninety-Nine Nights II, [1] was released in 2010.