![]() ![]() The tides started changing in 2018 with the release of Monster Hunter World. It was wildly popular in certain parts of the world, but the west simply hadn’t caught on. Go back just a few years ago, and Capcom’s action RPG franchise was a bit of a niche experience. Pardon the pun, but the Monster Hunter franchise is on the rise. With more characters, weapons, and secrets to uncover, Age of Calamity is a high-quality action game that sets a new bar for Nintendo spinoffs. While the game presents itself as a Zelda version of Rogue One, where you know that Hyrule is doomed, the story takes some unexpected twists that make for an exciting Zelda side story. It acts as a pseudo-prequel to The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild and tells the story of the Great Calamity. Unlike the first game, Age of Calamity is part of the actual Zelda cannon. Nintendo capitalized on that promise with Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity, a more fully realized entry that opens the doors wide open for the series’ future. It wasn’t a replacement for mainline Zelda adventures, but it showed that the franchise had some untapped potential when it came to side games. The hack-and-slash game turned Zelda into Dynasty Warriors with larger-than-life battles. ![]() (BTW I think G2 Ukraine hold is a bit less popular because apparently the meta favors J1 to Hawaiian Islands fleet, which leaves a couple fighters destroyed / out of range of reinforcing Ukraine on J2.When the first Hyrule Warriors game was originally released on the Wii U, it didn’t seem like much more than a niche spinoff. The way it can play out, Allies main stack is bigger, Germany gets bled out so can’t make good on really pressuring the Allied combined stack on Moscow, game transposes to Japan trying to be the major stack controller in Europe but Japan is denied the Caucasus IC because Germany controlls it (and maybe the Allies just won’t recapture Cacuasus to deny Japan the use of the IC). So I’d say definitely look for early German hold of Ukraine with Japanese fighter reinforcement, why not?īut be careful of Allied counterplay G2 Ukraine hold is good, but not game-ending. And though it may seem small to stack Ukraine, denying USSR income, it’s just these sorts of small advantages that can end up to a game-winning position. Germany can threaten any major Allied push to Karelia while holding Ukraine even without vastly favorable dice. ![]()
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