South Park: The Stick of Truth Previews

While I can’t help but think that not showing any gameplay footage to the public was a missed opportunity for Ubisoft’s E3, South Park: The Stick of Truth was at least shown to the press, which means we have a few more similar previews to round up.

RPGFan:

Combat itself plays out very similarly to Mario & Luigi, with timed button presses for extra damage becoming a must. All of the skills, like the rest of the game, involve a combination of school-age “magic” and real-life perversion. It’s safe to say that Obsidian didn’t skimp on any of South Park’s foul-mouthed humor, as our demo’s final battle with Cartman saw us mashing the A button to overpower his farts with our own.

It’s tough to call South Park: The Stick of Truth “gorgeous,” with its cardboard cut-out characters, but it is easy to say that it is extremely true to the show. Take away the HUD and UI and an argument could be made that just maybe you’re watching an episode of the television show. The environments are equally impressive, with destructible objects aplenty. South Park’s level-up system takes place within the world of – what else – Facebook, as the New Kid gains power by finding new friends in South Park, and the aesthetic works quite well.

USA Today:

The show’s humor is on full display during Stick of Truth, starting with the rampant passing of gas that serves as the game’s equivalent to magic. After cupping his hands to catch farts, the player tosses them to cause damage.

“No magic with the fan running,” shouts Butters. “You’ll kill us.”

Combat is turn-based, so players alternate turns with computer-controlled enemies they will encounter. The spells and abilities players use are comical, such as a lightning spell involving a bucket of water, jumper cables and a car battery, or the Flame Blast combining a can of hairspray and lighter. To restore mana, players must down burritos.

Tech News Daily:

Game developer Ubisoft demonstrated how “The Stick of Truth” would honor the show’s spirit at E3 conference in Los Angeles. The demo begins, as so many episodes do, in South Park Elementary School. Rather than playing as existing characters from the show, the game puts players in control of a new student, dubbed “Commander Douchebag” by Eric Cartman, one of the show’s main four characters.

The Commander finds himself in the middle of a war that’s broken out in the school between two factions competing for the titular Stick of Truth an artifact that holds either great power, or just provides a plot device for 8-year-old boys to fight over. Green-hatted Kyle leads the peaceful Elves, while Cartman has taken control of the belligerent Wizards. The Commander recruits series regular Butters into his party and sets out, under Cartman’s orders, to stop Kyle.

The game looks exactly like the show, and the animation retains its occasionally jerky feel. All of the series regulars reprise their voice roles, and the music sounds like a parody of the epic tracks in games like “The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.”

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