Testseek.com have collected 86 expert reviews of the Ni No Kuni 2: Revenant Kingdom and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Ni No Kuni 2: Revenant Kingdom.
March 2018
(85%)
86 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(86%)
33 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
85010086
The editors liked
Charming
Funny
And full of great moments
Excellent anime-inspired visuals
A best-in-class soundtrack that perfectly captures the game's various moods
An interesting world filled with delightful characters
Demanding combat that rewards reflexes and smart decision making
Twists and unexpected
Action RPG combat that scales from easier fights all the way up to brutal monster hunts in the postgame
Kingdom building is integral to the success of Evermore
Recruiting new citizens feels like a spiritual successor to Suikoden
On the shorter side
It
The story is elegant in its simplicity and execution
From beginning to end
Game modes are thrilling and maintain strong narrative consistency
Characters are charming and the world is adorable yet real
The editors didn't like
Too easy
Story whiffs at the end
Relies too often on basic fetch quests
Secondary activities resort to an off-putting visual style
Most characters in your party feel underdeveloped
Skirmish battles never become fun or essential
Joe Hisaishi tracks
While beautiful
Don't quite fit a 40hour RPG
Higgledies feel a bit underwhelming and there's little reason to raise up the perfect team
Could have had better pacing or stronger pathos late game
Despite changing up the gameplay style, Ni no Kuni II retains all of the same charm of its predecessor. The game oozes with style and heart. It is hard not to find yourself empathizing with King Evan and his retinue.There is never a dull moment in Ni no K...
For most of my time spent playing Ni No Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom, I loved the beautiful world and engaging combat - the core of the game. But every once in a while, everything would grind to a halt and I'd have to deal with the overworld strategy mechani...
Published: 2018-03-23, Author: Eric , review by: Gamingnexus.com
Abstract: My feelings about Ni No Kuni II are complicated. In order to understand them, I need to fill you in on some boring personal details about myself. Please bear with me, this is all going somewhere.There was a time in my life when I would not have recognized...
Published: 2018-03-23, Author: Peter , review by: gamespot.com
Excellent anime-inspired visuals, A best-in-class soundtrack that perfectly captures the game's various moods, An interesting world filled with delightful characters, Demanding combat that rewards reflexes and smart decision making, Twists and unexpected
Relies too often on basic fetch quests, Secondary activities resort to an off-putting visual style, Most characters in your party feel underdeveloped
Published: 2018-03-21, Author: Kai , review by: wccftech.com
Action RPG combat that scales from easier fights all the way up to brutal monster hunts in the postgame, Kingdom building is integral to the success of Evermore, Recruiting new citizens feels like a spiritual successor to Suikoden, On the shorter side, it
Skirmish battles never become fun or essential, Joe Hisaishi tracks, while beautiful, don't quite fit a 40hour RPG, Higgledies feel a bit underwhelming and there's little reason to raise up the perfect team
Watching King Evan Pettiwhisker Tildrum grow from a usurped young king into the leader of a global superpower and ruler of Evermore is one of the most memorable journeys in recent JRPGs...
Abstract: You cannot talk about Ni No Kuni 2: Revenant Kingdom without discussing the heavy influence Studio Ghibli has over the series. Although not directly involved with this game like they were with its predecessor in 2013, Ni No Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch...
Ni No Kuni 2: Revenant Kingdom distinguishes itself from its predecessor by layering fast-paced, real-time combat and an engaging kingdom building system atop more traditional RPG systems and quests. It's a shame it delivers so few truly memorable charact...