The single-player Scenario campaign transforms the fighter into a brawler a la Streets of Rage, tasking the player with taking their character of choice down a series of identical corridors, beating up waves of identical thugs along the way. Of course, it doesn’t help that what tries to pass for a story is delivered through an extremely clunky gameplay mode. The pretense at story feels a bit silly, seeing as how overwrought, completely serious cutscenes share the same space as a level where you beat up bear cubs (no, I’m actually serious here). The introduction to the game’s single-player scenario mode tries to helpfully offer up a recap of the first five Tekken games as a method to explain how an international multi-billion-dollar corporation with its own paramilitary force comes to be controlled by an angsty self-loathing twenty-something by virtue of the fact that the dude was really good at punching people in the face. This latest installment in the Tekken series continues the story of the powerful Mishima Zaibatsu and all those fighting to control it.
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