12/10/2023 0 Comments Mega man 11 review![]() Mega Man 11 is a game that has been made for the fans, which includes you masochists out there craving daily beatings by this classic franchise. Trust me, I’ve been there, and it isn’t pretty. If you play on normal or above, you’ll be crying in a corner before you know it, screaming into the void about how cruel that level is. Well, in some ways you’re right, it has been made easier, but only when you select a lower difficulty. Hardcore fans might be reading this and thinking that Capcom has forgotten all about how brutally difficult the original games were, perhaps that Mega Man 11 has been dumbed down to cater for a more casual market. Easier settings will simply offer more power-ups and health throughout each level, and reduce the damage you take, but the level design is just as harsh as it is on the highest difficulty. You’ll still die, just without the penalties you used to get. Thankfully, if you want to tone it down, there are lower difficulty settings to help ease the pain. It’s still the same side-scrolling platformer, with the same classic enemies (plus a bunch of new ones, all wonderfully animated) and insane difficulty levels. ![]() Don’t let the shiny 3D visuals fool you though, this is as close to the old games as you can get, gameplay-wise. So here we are, years after the last sequel, and Capcom has brought us a more modern-looking Mega Man. Mega Man has had a few anthologies released on the current consoles, collecting together almost all the main games from yesteryear as well as 2010’s Mega Man 10, but fans still want more. Capcom has been doing a lot of work in restoring its older franchises lately, with Street Fighter having enjoyed a 30th anniversary release and the upcoming releases of Onimusha’s remaster and Resident Evil 2’s remake early next year.
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