Conclusion: Dante's Inferno could have offered more. It's heavily influenced by God Of War, but never seeks to do anything to differentiate itself from its influence beyond a...
Pros: excellent character and set piece design, nice skill tree, excellent audio
Cons: bland level design, very repetitive combat, poor use of static cameras, poor use of the source material
Conclusion: Conclusion Dante’s Inferno presents itself to be a solid gaming experience, but falls short of being anything spectacular.
Pros: Dante’s Inferno presents itself to be a solid gaming experience, but falls short of being anything spectacular. A lack of intelligent puzzles, a few too many frustrati...
Cons: -Lacks an array of thought-provoking puzzles ,
-Certain battles and stages can become maliciously frustrating ,
-Lack of camera control gets atrocious far too often
Conclusion: Though a little on the short side and plagued with a few issues, like a slightly buggy camera trapping you behind the more monolithic adversaries and a few invisible
Conclusion: Dante's Inferno will be a unique game when it hits the Xbox 360 and PS3 on February 9th, maybe not for its gameplay, but for creating an environment of pure discomfort
Excerpt: Dante’s Inferno is in the vein of Sony’s excellent God of War series, or more accurately, it’s almost a God of War game under a different title.
Excerpt: After meh-ing through Dante's Inferno , I briefly entertained the idea of trading it in towards a game I might feel less embarrassed about having on my shelf.
Pros: It's free!
Cons: It's still not even worth the HD space it's written on.