

And the ingredients are, thanks to the aforementioned framerate, super buttery. Like a Hello Fresh box the size of a basking shark, you've got everything you need to sustain you for months. Having said all this, if you're interested in giving Nioh 2 a go, or if you're already a mega fan and you want the absolute bestest experience, then the Complete Edition is for you. If you get mangled to death by a demonic horse wielding a bloodied hacksaw, it's your own fault. So strap on your Sengoku period garb and get out there, pal. This might sound daunting to someone who's never tried Nioh 2, and that's because it is. In a weird sort of way, the Nioh 2 community reminds me of Formula 1, such is the extent to which everyone's fine-tuning weapon and armour builds in an endless pursuit of the optimal. Great significance lies in the gear you're equipping, the stats you're boosting, and the materials you're hoovering up. I'd say it trades the intricacy of the environments you navigate in a Souls, for greater complexity in character customisation. On first glance it's easy to mistake it for a Souls game wearing Japanese garb, but this isn't the case at all.

For those unfamiliar with Nioh 2, it's a so-called "soulslike" (that is to say, "like a Dark Souls game") which further dubs itself as "masocore", which is just a fancy term for being crushingly difficult.
