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Blade and soul online review
Blade and soul online review




blade and soul online review
  1. Blade and soul online review Pc#
  2. Blade and soul online review plus#

There’s a big, involving single-player storyline. There are four races (purely cosmetic – what race you choose won’t affect your stats) and seven character classes, including Warlock, which will arrive a while after the UK launch. When setting up a character, NCSoft is proud of the fact that you can generate a unique name for it across all the global servers (a big thing for existing Blade & Soul devotees, apparently). But that has a welcome corollary, as Blade & Soul will run on a pretty low-specification PC. Don’t expect your breath to be taken away by the general resolution and modernity of its graphics, though – it isn’t the newest of games. Visually it’s pretty impressive with a strong, highly stylised, anime-influenced art-style. Swords and guns feature prominently as, naturally, do dungeons and boss-battles. Instead, it’s very much an action-oriented game, with an emphasis on martial arts-style combat and movement (you can, for example, glide in the air and dash on the surface of water).

blade and soul online review

Blade and soul online review plus#

Although it is free-to-play (however, those eager to commit it to from the start in the UK can choose between three Founder’s Packs, offering different lengths of premium membership plus an array of exotic and useful in-game items, priced between £19 and an eye-watering £95), its gameplay falls outside of the expected fantasy-RPG blueprint. But if you crave the camaraderie and community feel that playing an MMO (perhaps as part of a clan or guild) brings, Blade & Soul could be worth checking out.īlade & Soul doesn’t conform to many of the MMO stereotypes.

Blade and soul online review Pc#

Sure, South Korea has such a unique gaming culture (centred exclusively on online PC games) that what plays well over there doesn’t necessarily make sense over here. Sadly, publisher NCSoft (also an industry giant, but until now known only in the UK for the MMOs Guild Wars and Lineage) refuses to give out audience figures for it, but it’s likely that millions of gamers have played it. For Blade & Soul has consistently been among the top ten most successful games in South Korea since it launched in 2012 (and since 2013 has enjoyed similar success in China). It’s a pretty safe bet that you’ve never heard of Blade & Soul, unless you happen to be a connoisseur of massively multiplayer online games (MMOs) – in which case, the news that it has finally arrived in the UK is probably the source of much excitement.






Blade and soul online review