Im folgenden Video siehst du, wie du consolewars als Web-App auf dem Startbildschirm deines Smartphones installieren kannst.
Hinweis: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ist es schlimm,das mich diese Spiele-Idee erregt? :o :o
Wie geil kann ein Spiel nur sein? Oo
Alleine die kleinen Gameplayschnitzel lassen auf was sehr großem hoffen.
Their future just keeps getting brighter, as their other new title, also announced this week, seems to be an even more virtuosic blend of casual and old-school gaming. It's called "Inazuma Eleven", and it's an RPG about a high school soccer team. There have been numerous anime-based soccer games (or, um, soccer-based anime games), over the years, though more often than not, when they're not flat-out soccer games, they're usually trifling exercises in ambiguous genres. Take the legendary manga series Captain Tsubasa, which has been made into half a dozen or so part text adventure, part action game, part sports game genre collages over the years. What Level 5 seems to be giving Inazuma Eleven is actual, triple-A love. And it will hopefully make all the difference.
Previous Level 5 games, such as Dark Cloud, have allowed players to build their own cities with items found during questing -- more often than not, the side-quests in a Level 5 RPG have outnumbered the main quests. Level 5 has proven themselves deft at making games where you will likely spend time doing mostly-irrelevant stuff than by actually progressing in the quest. With Inazuma Eleven, they seem to have taken that ambiguous talent and directed it at intelligently crafting a living world. It's a soccer RPG, and it's also a high-school RPG, yes, and neither of these things is totally original, though based on early screenshots, it seems absolutely clear that Level 5 is going above and beyond the call of duty to make the game world live and breathe -- this isn't some par-for-the-course Japanese graphic adventure, where you click menu choices and read text in windows beneath talking heads. Oh no, you're actually walking around the school on your own.
Judging by the game's official website, the high school in which the game is set will combine the best bits of Animal Crossing and the Japanese RPG genre: instead of leveling up, you're fostering relationships between team members by helping each other study or eating lunch together. Instead of battling bosses, you're playing soccer, using the stylus to command your team on the field. It looks surprisingly deep and action-packed.
The character designs and animated sequences are being handled by none other than the production team behind the "Pokemon" animated series, which should impress the pedigree upon any young boys reading Weekly Famitsu over the course of the next couple months. And the music is being composed entirely by the amazing Yasunori Mitsuda, who's at his best when he's composing lighthearted, soaring themes that might inspire teenage boys to fight for their dreams. (He's better than his best when he's composing dark, bittersweet ballads (as in Square's Chrono Cross), and he transcends "better than his best" when he's phoning in soundtracks for odd titles like this year's Armodyne, the music of which was subtle, sublime, careless, and perfect).
Level 5, it seems, will also be having their own booth at Tokyo Game Show, and, amazingly, players who wait in line to play Professor Layton and the Demon Box will receive a DS cartridge with a demo of Inazuma Eleven on it.
(Ein Basketball RPG oder Biathlon RPG, wär net schlecht)