
Technos Japan 路 1989
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Techn艒s created once again a vastly different experience with Double Dragon II on the NES. The experience system was dropped, but the moveset still underwent a few changes. The elbow attack and turning jump kick are gone, but with the standard kick directed backwards they seemed a bit redundant anyway. There are two new ways to make enemies in a grapple suffer, elbow smashes to the head, and a high kick to propel them away. In the brief time window when the Lee brothers are crouching after a jump or after getting knocked down, it鈥檚 possible to perform a rising uppercut or a knee jump attack. The timing for these isn鈥檛 easy, but they are the most powerful moves in the game. On the NES, Double Dragon II is a much more innovative and unique sequel than in the arcade, but it marks also the time Double Dragon started its schizophrenic shifting between wildly different tones and gameplay styles. In a way it鈥檚 one of the best games to bear the Double Dragon name, but it鈥檚 hard to shake the feeling that Techn艒s had already started to loose a cohesive vision of what it meant to be Double Dragon, both in tone and in gameplay.
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