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Fire Pro Wrestling Returns

Fire Pro Wrestling Returns

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From: Agetec
Category: Video Games

List Price: $14.99
Buy New: $8.41
You Save: $6.58 (44%)



New (17) Used (15) from $6.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 32 reviews
Sales Rank: 3739

Platform: Playstation2
ESRB: Teen
Media: Video Game
Batteries Included: No
Age: 12 - 20 years
Operating System: Playstation 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 0.1 x 0.1 x 0

MPN: 09280
UPC: 093992092801
EAN: 0093992092801
ASIN: B000VG6Z9S

Release Date: November 13, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~

Features:
  • First time on PS2 in North America
  • Up to 8 plays simultaneously go toe to toe
  • A huge variety of match types with a complete arsenal of wrestling moves and holds
  • Match Maker mode lets players set up their own wrestling show, earn money, and lure talent
  • The ability to create your own referee, ring, logo and even belt allows players to play their dream match

Customer Reviews:   Read 27 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Very Un-friendly   December 5, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

The graphics and sound are fine though they could be maybe more distinctive. Most wrestlers look the same.

The menus are very unintuitive. It is hard to figure out how to do things. This could have been made way easier. There's no on screen display to say hitting this button does this or that. That would have been helpful.

The name is true, you need to be a pro to play this. This is for gamers not video game fans. They could have just made the grapple have buttons display like with Naruto or DBZ games but instead you have to do some kind of timing thing which isn't even announced on screen when you do it right.

The game has some incredible features like the ability to speed it up and intricate control of the create a wrestler enemy AI. So it's not a bad game but it is just too hard. On the easiest difficulty setting I was being beat by the computer.



3 out of 5 stars Alot of fun, until your card dies.   October 26, 2008
Fire Pro Wrestling Returns is a sim fan's dream. It has a ton of real (although re-named) wrestlers and it allows for 500 (yes, 500) creatied wrestlers. The detail in appearence is massive for a 2d-esque game and the movelists are so large it will take you days to preview every move available. I spent several hours a day for a couple weeks playing the heck out of this game.

The one (massive) problem is that this game seems to hate memory cards. I got file corruption errors about every few days. Losing creatied wrestlers every few days is painful considering how long it takes to make them. So eventually I stopped playing altogether which is a shame since I loved the game to death.

I hightly reccomend this game if you have 2 cards and can keep backups at all times. If I had a 2nd card I'd be doing that right now.



5 out of 5 stars Fire Pro Wrestling Returns is as good as it gets!   September 3, 2008
Quite simply the best wrestling game ever made. Well, maybe it's a draw between Fire Pro Wrestling Returns and NES Pro Wrestling.


4 out of 5 stars Is It Really That Challenging?   August 30, 2008
FIRE PRO WRESTLING RETURNS for the Sony PS2 sounds like a wrestling fan's dream: You get to create and play whatever you want. While dozens of gimmick matches that have been made popular in the United States aren't featured in this game, the amount of customization available to the player is unmatched.

Yet, this game has so much debate and mixed reviews that I was too scared to buy it for 20 dollars at my local game store. What if I couldn't "master" it? What if I like "flashy WWE games" too much? Only when I saw it on a K-Mart rack for 10 bucks did I finally just go for it.

I'm beginning this review with this little story because while both lovers and haters have a point, I think the overall tone is misleading.

Yes, this game is unlike most wrestling games in the States.
Yes, it takes longer than usual to get used to the controls.
Yes, the game lacks any form of narrative or single-player incentive.

But, take it from a newbie - FIRE PRO WRESTLING RETURNS is a game that you can learn, and enjoy. You just need to have patience.

The wrestling gameplay is primarily based around the timing of moves. For example, grapples aren't started by one player. Instead, they happen automatically, and whoever enters the button combination first pulls off the move. Escaping from pins and submissions aren't just about button-mashing. The only to get out of a pin is to rapidly press (X), while you have to use the D-Pad to escape holds. Luck and fatigue plays into the counters and reversals more than just the push of a button. In fact, button-mashing penalizes you more than it helps. Landing high-flying moves is difficult if your opponent isn't dazed, but that's logical wrestling, if you ask me.

What's even stranger for a guy who's never played FIRE PRO before is that this PS2 title doesn't just have wrestling matches. There are MMA-style fights where you ground & pound in a cage, and can't win via pinfalls. There's also a K-1 kind of kickboxing mode, where you only use strikes; grapples will often only result in clinches.

However, FIRE PRO WRESTLING RETURNS also includes Cage Matches, Barbed Wire Matches, Battle Royals, and all sorts of Tournament and Team modes. There's even a Deathmatch mode, where after a certain amount of time, bombs go off inside the ring. The more you play this game, the more you realize that FPWR is more than just a "wrestling game"; it's a fighting game, too.

All of these modes work very well, although I'm disappointed that the single-player features (like Competition and Season) only give you points for your success, rather than unlockable characters. Then again, that's also a bonus. Every character is available from the outset, and you can create over a hundred more. I don't recognize any of the 300+ Japanese stars, but they're all fun to use.

The Create Modes are where FIRE PRO WRESTLING RETURNS runs into some problems. You see, while the gameplay and style are a matter of taste, the menu system is pretty un-user-friendly. Putting together a belt, customized ring, and managing factions is pretty easy. Creating a fighter is complex once you start getting to the A.I., but you don't have to manage that part if you don't want to. In other words, making a wrestler is only as complicated as you want it to be. Heck, you can even create a referee! Overall, character customization is a very managable that will please most gamers. While it may take some testing and tweaking, at least you'll be able to accurately design how your favorite wrestler would actually behave once the bell rings.

However, trying to design a logo is an absolute pain in my you-know-what. Rather than using an interface like ANIMAL CROSSING - or Windows Paint - FIRE PRO WRESTLING RETURNS has controls that are horrible. It's bad enough that sometimes one button can do several things in the menus. For example, the [Start] button doesn't always exit a menu; sometimes it's (Triangle). But there several sub-menus in the Logo Design feature, meaning that I still haven't figured what to do. It took me a few minutes to figure out how to exit the thing! I'm sure creating your own art is possible, but I couldn't tell you how to do it.

Other than the customization difficulties, the challenges in FIRE PRO WRESTLING RETURNS are legitimate and beatable. You might have to look at the manual sometimes to learn the gameplay, but it is learnable and very deep once you get the hang of it. The default A.I. difficulty won't slow down for you to learn, but at least I know that FPWR will always have a challenge ahead. There aren't any storyline modes, but the in-ring action is so crisp that the game is fun to WATCH! That's right...the A.I. is so smart that they will put on an excellent show without a controller in your hand. I can't give the A.I. enough praise; the default Level 4 difficulty beat my tail, poured salt on wounds, and told me to go home to mommy.

There's a hundreds of other little details that FIRE PRO WRESTLING RETURNS includes that I don't have time to mention. But if you're still unsure about whether you should buy this game, I have a few suggestions:

* Obviously, rent the game first if you can.

* This might not be as helpful, but go to this PDF website to look at a free strategy guide. You'll be looking at the manual anyway, so this might give you a good idea.
- - - http://www.gamefaqs.com/console/ps2/file/927675/50475 - - -

* Look up this game on YouTube. There are many videos (with excellent created WWE fighters) of matches. As I said before, FPWR is equally fun to watch.

I'll always love the WWE franchises, but there is more than one brand out there. Just like Akira Kurosawa inspired American cinema, this Japanese title has given wrestling gamers a worthy alternative.

I give the game:
"8.0 / 10".



5 out of 5 stars This game wins the championship hands down   August 16, 2008
I just got this game yesterday and, without a doubt it is the BEST wrestling game ever put out for the PS2!!! With 300 wrestlers on it to start with, the ability to make 500 more, being able to customize everything including the title belts, you possibilities are endless. The AI is tough at first, but once ya get the hang of the game, which I would recommend setting the AI at the weakest to start with, it will come to ya fairly quick. I could not be happier with this one, for it is so much better than any of the WWE games out there.

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