There is a lot to love about , from its unique art style to its vast roster of playable heroes and villains. Of course, it has big shoes to fill from both its predecessors in the hero-shooter genre as well as past Marvel titles. However, there is one game that can fairly confidently ignore while climbing to the top of the best Marvel games, and that is the unremarkable. While it managed to squeeze out some enjoyable DLC, didn't leave the best legacy and ultimately disappointed comic book fans and newcomers.
Fortunately, reviews are shaping up to be very positive, and, in many ways, it seems to address the flaws of. However, there is one particular issue that suffered from that is fixing. Comic book fans can finally rest easy knowing that a fundamental flaw with approach to both its characters and their overall design has been thoughtfully solved in .
takes many of the classic costume designs from the comics and adapts them to its unique anime aesthetic to create something wholly different yet ultimately very familiar. This art style has proven to be a hit with fans, with the character trailers successfully building hype for the game and helping players decide who they will main first. It's not an entirely new approach to character design, and there are shades of within each character.
However, where other games have merely aped cartoonish style with little success, has used it as a perfect vehicle from which to adapt these already incredibly cartoonish designs. The overall aesthetic works better in than in a lot of clones and feels more faithful to the comic books than a grittier or more grounded approach. It also allows for whackier characters like Jeff the Land Shark to make an appearance and not feel immediately out of place.
Most importantly, unique designs are already avoiding the biggest free-to-play issue by offering players satisfying character skins from the outset, rather than charging an arm and a leg for them. No matter who players pick, they'll look as
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