As you head towards your enemy’s main base, the story will unfold, typically in voice-overs, with more critical events getting cutscenes. As you proceed toward your objective, you’ll have to take checkpoints which can take the form of small wooden forts or huge castles. You, of course, are a historically inaccurate force of nature that sweeps through thousands of soldiers, killing them with superhuman speed and sometimes supernatural powers. While each chapter tells a story of a major event like the Yellow Turban Rebellion or the fight against Dong Zhuo, the game plays out much the same. So while at the end of one chapter, your faction might control most or all of China, at the beginning of the next you’ll find your forces once again entrenched and surrounded by a new enemy.ĭynasty Warriors 9 Review: More Like The Flirtation of the Three Kingdoms Each chapter encompasses a major event in the saga of ancient China, and generally, at least some time passes in between them. One of the odd things about the game, especially since it has an open-world, is the lack of persistence. Dynasty Warriors is based on Romance of the Three Kingdoms so you can play through the stories of the Wu, Wei, and Jin Kingdoms in addition to the Shu Kingdom, as well as taking command of some unaffiliated characters. I chose to play through the game as Liu Bei, which puts you in the Shu Kingdom’s storyline. The game is divided into 13 chapters which you can go through with multiple characters. Unfortunately, there’s not really much to do on the map that makes it that special. ![]() Instead of getting a cutscene then fighting in Whatever Castle, the whole game takes place on one huge map. ![]() The significant change that comes with Dynasty Warriors 9 is the switch to an open-world format. Advertisement Dynasty Warriors 9 Review: The Land of China
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