![]() Solo play is available but the headline feature is 2v2 tag play, letting you pick any pair from the 49-strong character roster and tinker around with new features like combined moves, throws and two-person combos. Tag Tournament 2 inherits much of Tekken 6, though subtle character tweaks make for a more refined experience. ![]() It feels good to see a fighting game focus on what it does best.īut with the fighting taking centre stage, veteran players might feel a bit put off by how familiar it all feels. Tekken Tag Tournament 2 immediately strikes a positive note by focusing squarely on its iconic fisticuffs, rather than Tekken 6’s painfully overwrought and utterly detestable Scenario mode or the laughable Story component of SoulCalibur V. Namco Bandai has pulled out an oldie but a goodie, the ‘dream match’ that’s been working wonders for fighting franchises since the golden days of King of Fighters ’98, and used it to create a game that’s free of the cloying narratives that have eroded the publisher’s recent efforts. But this latest trip to the Mishima Zaibatsu is, thankfully, a far more elegant and generous effort than it first appears. ![]() At first glance Tekken Tag Tournament 2 feels like a novelty take the core of Tekken 6 and bung in a tag mechanic so Namco Bandai can laugh all the way to the bank.
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