After 3 hours, I'm impressed by how Blades of Fire smelts Dark Souls and Monster Hunter together to forge high-impact action into twisted new shapes

After 3 hours, I'm impressed by how Blades of Fire smelts Dark Souls and Monster Hunter together to forge high-impact action into twisted new shapes


Fighting is just more fun when you get to name the weapon you engage in it with, and every successful blow has a great sense of impact. Kill a set amount of an enemy and you'll learn the blueprint of the weapon they've been hitting you with. The prospect of having to take down sixty weaklings so I can learn how to forge something is a bit too MMO grindy to my tastes, but the reward of a nasty new claymore to play with after takes the sting off a bit.

Author: Abbie Stone


Published at: 2025-04-27 21:00:00

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