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SoulWorker (Hangul: 소울워커, also known as SoulWorker Online) is an anime-style free action massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMOARPG) developed by Lion Games Studios from South Korea. The game story takes place fifteen years ago after a portal, known as the void, started bringing demons into the world.
Farmagia is a single-player action role-playing game and farm life sim in which the player grows monsters from seeds acquired from dungeons called mazes. [1] [2] On the player's farm, actions such as tilling and watering cost stamina called Farmagia Points (FP), which is replenished upon completing a maze. [2]
Little Goody Two Shoes is a video game developed by AstralShiftPro and published by Square Enix Collective. [2] It includes elements of role-playing, adventure and horror games, and has an anime-inspired visual style. Players control a girl called Elise, who attempts to avoid horrific monsters in the enchanted woods while searching for a way to ...
Metacritic compiled a "universal score" of 74/100 from 22 reviews for Clash of Ninja 2. [43] X-Play criticized the game for its limited two-player game and similar fighting styles of the characters. They did, however, praise the game's four-player mode and animation, commenting that it "[nailed] the look of the cartoon characters," and referred ...
Jump Force is a 1-v-1 fighting game where the player controls a team of three characters from a selection of various manga series featured in the Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine. [1] Players control one character at a time while the others are used as support, with players able to switch between them during battle.
Kantai Collection (Japanese: 艦隊これくしょん, Hepburn: Kantai Korekushon, lit. ' Fleet Collection '), [a] abbreviated as KanColle (艦これ, KanKore), is a Japanese free-to-play web browser game developed by Kadokawa Games and published by DMM.com.
Sushi Go! - The Pick and Pass Card Game. In this fun (and highly adorable) card game, players compete to collect sushi, sashimi, and other foods worth varying amounts of points.
The magazine ultimately implored potential players to "avoid this one at all costs." [6] Nicholas Des Barres (Nick Rox) of GameFan was highly positive to the game, praising the art gallery, the graphics and music, and concluded that Yū Yū Hakusho is an "excellent, well-rounded fighting game". [3]