


Dodges, slashes, and movement are smooth and precise. This basically makes up for the game’s lack of weaponry the sword is all you got for this 8-hour boss rush.Ĭontrols are spot-on too. Your playstyle may vary, but Eldest Souls offers flexibility to brave the bosses. They’re pretty self-explanatory: Windslide makes you move fast and hit quick, Berserk Slash lets you hit super-hard consecutively, and Counter lets you play defensively to punish enemy attacks. After many, many deaths and attempts at luck, I just stuck with the Windslide skill tree because I like to dart around the field like Muhammad Ali. The former can be allocated to either the Windslide (Green), Berserk Slash (Red), and Counter (Blue) tree. See, after killing an Old God, you get a skill point and a Shard. You also have three different skill trees to spec in to complement your playstyle. Personally, I find some fights really taxing but fun when I realize that some of the Old God’s attacks can be dodged by just moving and weaving carefully and craftily on the battlefield, just a few pixels away from an attack’s hitbox. You’ll have to find ways to evade without relying so much on the dash at times. Some bosses will take advantage of this restriction with multiple attacks in succession that seem quick from the get-go. The dash is Eldest Souls’ stamina mechanic you cannot spam this evasive technique. Use up all three at one go, and you can’t use it until at least one dash pip on the meter is filled up. But the latter has a catch: you only can have up to three dashes before you’re out. To help you out, you have the aforementioned giant two-handed sword that you can charge to do a forward power slash that heals you (Bloodthirst state), a Blood Burst attack that you can unleash if you land a charged slash hit, and a dash for evasion. But when you beat them with just a pixel of your health left, you feel just damn good conquering these behemoths and feel proud that you’ve done it with skill and perseverance.
#Eldest souls switch review software#
Developer Fallen Flag Studio really nailed the essence of a Soulslike title without the exploration and minion-culling bits with the way the bosses fight and requiring you to pay attention and be patient.Īnd just like those From Software inspirations, charging in head-first and hoping for the best is not going to get you far. You’ll be itching to go at a particular boss one more time even with multiple deaths, with most of them being so close to completing the fight. While one or two of these monstrosities can be a tad cheap, each bout here strikes a fine line between fun and frustration. Eldest Souls is tough as all hell, with most of the bosses requiring you to die multiple deaths to get the hang of their patterns and rhythm. If you think the game’s 2D pixel art style looks inviting, a couple of fights with these Old Gods will prove otherwise. They will test your mettle and unleash a few surprises your way. The meticulous of you lot will find a lot to uncover here.Įach boss is unique and oozes character, from a giant guard with dark tendrils to even a Deer God. There are some quests you can partake in to get special items that buff you, but that’s up to you if you want to uncover them. However, it’s all kept tight and linear, to the point where all you need to worry about is killing the bosses in the area.

The area itself has its own story you need to explore for yourself, being a crusader wielding a giant two-handed sword, complete with lush 2D pixel art and a harrowing-yet-kinda-bright art direction. The story is this: there are Old Gods you need to kill in this place called the Citadel because they messed up the land you’re in. Everything in this 2D action game is meticulously built to test your action limits, and you are sure to break a controller or two as you fail over and over getting mauled by the game’s adversaries the first 10 times. Despite its dubious title, the quality and design of this indie slaughterfest is anything but. If you love Soulsborne/Soulslike games but rather just cut to the chase and fight the genre’s tough-but-fair bosses in a 2D top-down fashion, Eldest Souls is going to be your 2021 indie jam.
