6/1/2023 0 Comments Kung fury street rage enemies![]() You can pay a small amount to remove ads if you want to, but they didn’t bother us too much.Įven if you don’t care to get dragged into the film, the music video – if that all seems a little ‘too much’ for you – then just play the game, because this is about as faithful to a classic 80s arcade machine you’re going to get on the iPhone. It’s not imaginative, it’s not complicated – it’s simple as hell, but the graphics, the gameplay, the mentality – they’re all so dedicated to the cause that the Kung Fury machine has continued seemingly without putting a foot wrong. Oh, and it’s free. Then you get the hang of the combos, and the scores are incredible! One hour later, you realise you’re still playing with one recurring goal: keep beating your personal death. I mean, I dont want to be a whiner but the game was already hard. Eventually, you get hit, after three times your lives are gone and you’re done. Why enemies are much more faster than the original release Not just fast, but super fast. Classic arcade score-booster.įail fast, then get back into it – fast-paced arcade action at its best The more bad guys you hit without missing any and punching dead air, the more your score rockets thanks to combo points. However, that won’t get you on the high score leader board. Taking a hit drops the combo significantly and three hits ends the run. As long as you can continuously take out enemies without missing or getting hit a combo will build leading to higher scores. The more bad guys you destroy, the higher your score. Some enemies go down in one hit, some take 2-4 hits, others require a left-right-left combo, etc. ![]() There are two buttons – one to attack left, another to attack right. ![]() There’s no directional buttons – but then there’s no particular direction to go in. Your job, as Kung Fury, is to beat ’em up. Kung Fury: Street Rage is a two button brawling game that was released alongside the 30 minute movie by the same name. And they start slow, but very quickly they come at your fast. So here’s what happens – after the wonderfully clipped animation of the intro, you’re dropped in the middle of a typical urban environment straight out of the 1980s – i.e. The fast ramping up of difficulty (iOS games tend to ease you in these days), the pure focus on a high score (narrative? Pah – who needs it!), multiple enemies to destroy, button-bashing mayhem – Kung Fury does it all properly. There are plenty of games on the iPhone claiming to be retro but they misses so many nuances.
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