


Crafting components are easy to come by through the game, however, the base components tend to be harder to come by, occasionally forcing you to grind in order to get the items you need. South Park: The Fractured But Whole also introduces a new crafting system that allows you to create healing items, superhero costumes, mission items and also artefacts which increase your power ranking through the game.

Also, you are now able to use up to four characters in combat, each with their own abilities that can either hinder the combat or enhance your road to victory. These squares also affect the damage radius of the various superhero moves, forcing you to be careful which moves you decide to execute as some of them may also hurt your characters. The combat is now more strategy oriented, as the battle field has been replaced with a number squares that the characters can move into. One of the main factors that made But Whole’s predecessor such a hit was the combat system and the developers have improved this system somewhat for this title. The plot borrows heavily from Captain America: Civil War, but there are countless references to Netflix TV shows and the comparison between Marvel and DC. With one of three classes of superhero to choose from, with further classes added as you play through the main quest, South Park: The Fractured But Whole offers a style of play that will suit all gamers. It is fair to say that I loved every second of it, and when rumours of another South Park game due to hit the market, I must admit that I was caught up in the excitement.įor South Park: The Fractured But Whole, we are thrust into the shoes of The New Kid once again as we take on the role of a superhero and join the illustrious Coon and Friends as you aid them in tracking down a lost cat named Scrambles to gain the $100 reward and become the number one superhero franchise in town. A spoof of the fantasy games that have flooded the market in recent years, it featured a fantastic combat system, superbly written plot and was full of the dry, borderline offensive humour that we have come to expect from South Park. South Park: The Stick of Truth was a game nobody expected to be as good as it was.
