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| Virtua Fighter 5 | 
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| List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $13.49 You Save: $6.50 (33%)
Buy New/Used from $11.56
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 46 reviews) Sales Rank: 1612 Category: Video Games
Publisher: Sega Of America, Inc. Studio: Sega Of America, Inc. Brand: Sega Of America, Inc. Label: Sega Of America, Inc. Platform: Playstation 3 ESRB: Teen Media: Video Game Autographed: 0 Memorabilia: 0 Batteries Included: 0 Age: 12 - 20 years Legal Disclaimer: Brand new and factory sealed game! Ready to ship. All standard shipping games ship via first class mail with free tracking and insurance! Expedited items are shipped via USPS Priority Mail. All of our games, new and used are backed by a solid 90-day warranty. Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 69005 Model: 69005 UPC: 010086690057 EAN: 0010086690057 ASIN: B000IONGWW
Release Date: February 20, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| | Two new characters, Mexican wrestler El Blaze and Monkey Kung Fu master Eileen, round out the cast of 17 dynamic fighters | | | Challenge their opponents in unique types of arenas, in stunning & highly-detailed 3D fighting environments inspired by locations around the world | | | New offensive moves let players move around their opponent from the side and back, allowing players to be more strategic | | | Customize characters with the enhanced attachment system and customization engine, giving players more flexibility than ever | | | Next-Gen presentation includes HD resolution (widescreen) and Dolby Digital 5.1CH sound |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Virtua Fighter 5 will elevate the arcade fighting genre to all-new heights. Virtua Fighter 5 sets the standard for console fighting games including all the features fans know and love, plus enhanced gameplay mechanics, additional characters, and new fighting styles, as well as newly redesigned 3D environments.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 41 more reviews...
  Huh no Multiplayer!!!!!! November 28, 2008 This game would have been alot better with Multiplayer. But having no Multiplayer makes the game become a low score.
  Great addition to the Virtua Fighter franchise November 3, 2008 The Virtua Fighter franchise has always been a bit of an odd bird to me. But then, I was a Street Fighter faithful first and foremost. This game is beautiful, with fantastic lighting and water effects and amazingly rendered characters. It is almost too pretty to be a fighting game, especially since at times it seems they spent more time polishing the look of the game than the physics and hit detection. There are times you are positive you executed a combo or certain move properly on the controller, but the character refuses to comply with the command, no matter how many times you do it. Then, suddenly, the same combination of buttons will start executing the move you expect again. It ends up handling like a button-masher at times, since it seems nearly impossible to get the fighters to do your precise bidding. I thought this may be mostly due to my inexperience with these games, but my friend who is a long-time devotee of the series said the same thing when he played. He ended up adapting to the feel of it and laying waste to my attempts to speed mash my way to victory, so I know it can be mastered. Overall, the game is always fun, there are plenty of characters and modes, and it is always visually stunning. If you are a fan of fighting games, this one is a definite must-have.
  It's Virtua Fighter. For your PS3. October 18, 2008 The title pretty much says it all. VF5 is VF5. If you have played Virtua Fighter before, then you know what to expect. Sega has added a couple of new characters, prettied up the backgrounds, and set the whole thing to run at 720p. The fighting engine has as much depth as the old VF games, which can be a good or a bad thing depending on what you want.
I bought this game because Amazon was selling it for $20. I feel as though I got $20 worth of fighting game. If you enjoy fighting games and you have someone else to play with who also enjoys fighting games, it's not a bad deal. You could do far worse on the PS3.
The graphics, surprisingly, are merely okay. It is a sad point when Dead or Alive 4, which came out at the end of 2005, looks better than this game. It's an even sadder point when DOA, which used to be easily dismissed as a garbage VF rip-off with breasts, arguably plays better too.
If you have not played Virtua Fighter before, I would not advise you to buy this game. VF is a very "technical" fighting game, which is a nice way of saying "it will take you years to master how to play this game." Truth be told, you'll get far, far more enjoyment out of Soul Caliber 4 than you ever will out of VF5 if you've never played VF before.
  To be honest... it's kind of bland. October 3, 2008 So after dropping a hefty wad of cash on the PS3 I decided to pick up a moderately priced game for two players to tide me over until the next payday. In comes VF5.
Virtua Fighter 5 is a decent enough fighting game for $20 but it is not great either. In the end I feel like I should have saved that $20 to buy some games off the PSN store.
It doesn't have a story mode. As crappy as the stories might be in other fighters, they serve to flesh out the character and let the player feel like the fight matters for some reason in what is otherwise a one-note genre. Instead VF5 gives you a career mode that is just one match after another with screens in between that say "character A vs. character B." Absolutely riveting! But of course since there is no story that means the characters must be unique and interesting on their own? You know with wacky costumes and awesome individual move sets, like Mortal Kombat or something? Right?
Wrong. The characters themselves are essentially interchangeable. There's that one girl who does the kicks... oh no wait I am thinking of the other girl. And that big dude who's like a wrestler I think. Or are there two of those? Who knows? Who cares? Seriously the only character who seems unique is the Lucha Libre guy with flaming leather pants (which is 70% of the reason I gave this game 3 stars in fun category). A lot of people that come over to play the game are button mashers. I know purists hate games that give button mashing any credit, but what do you want? Not everyone is a gamer. Considering the lack of online play, you can only play with other people in person. Well everyone I know that comes over to play has jobs and studying to do, so there's no way they're going to be anything other than button mashers. The result is a fight that is composed of one three punch chain and a couple kicks. After a few minutes of this someone is bound to suggest a rousing game of Scrabble because that would be ten times more riveting (seriously though, scrabble is pretty sweet).
If you are a hardcore gamer, then this game is not bad. Each character has plenty of difficult move sets you can try and master. The shaolin monk guy and the drunken kung fu dude are pretty good examples of this. Of course there is no preview mode, so you'll never know if you're doing the moves right because there is no way for you to see what it is supposed to be. The more difficult move sets also look better and might help you feel like the characters are more unique. That is if you are still playing this game and not using it as a fancy coaster on your coffee table.
The graphics in this game are great though. Things look awesome if you have an hdtv to really let the system do its thing. Some of the levels make you wish you could go vacation there instead of having a slow-paced boring fight there. The characters look great too, even if they have some awkward proportion issues. (Is El Blaze just small or is Jeffrey Mcwild suffering from a thyroid problem? You'll never know because there is no story mode).
I think my review is harsher than I meant it to be but still VF5 really doesn't leave any impression. Yeah it's a fighting game and that's about it. It's easily accessible because button mashing works (it just looks the same for every character: punch punch punch kick and repeat). It offers complicated combos that are animated well for those willing to learn the intricacies (but no way of knowing which move is which and if you're doing the right one). It has great graphics but no story. Essentially it looks pretty but has no personality. If you're a huge fan of Virtua Fighter, well why are you even looking at the reviews, you know you're probably going to buy the game. If you lean more towards games like Soul Calibur, skip this because you won't see the appeal. Unless you're trying to rekindle your love for board games.
  Mindless bashing, but the same can be said about the entire genre September 11, 2008 I am not a console gamer and bought the PS3 mainly for the Blu-ray. This is one of the few games I have gathered for the machine.
The graphics is par for the course. The movement is not perfectly smooth, but not overly jarring either. The game play is predictably mindless and repetitive. The demand on twitchy fingers suits early teens only. All in all, it is exactly what one expects from a fighting game. I still get to blow off some steam once in a long while. As a time killer, this one does not succeed for me, but I consider that a good thing.
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