Character Reference lets you check out character histories, models, and even get a commentary on everyone from Chi-Chi. Mission 100 pits you against a team of themed enemies. After your ten days have passed, you fight a foe and, if you win, continue the process, fighting stronger foes to earn Z-points. Sim Dragon Mode gives you ten days to prepare for battle, giving you the option to simulate training, exploring, or resting. There are still tournament modes which lets you fight against the CPU in different battles, which introduces the Otherworld Tournament for BT3.
The Disc Fusion system, which honestly feels like a consolation prize for the online-less PS2 version, unlocks ranking battle from previous BT games, which is a nice addition but doesn't effectively replace online versus. The returning characters' attacks all looked flashier, creating new, incredible effects that we didn't know we were missing in Budokai Tenkaichi 2.īeyond the Dragon History Story mode, there is still a ton to do in BT3.
The previous Budokai Tenkaichi looked much better than the actual anime, and BT3 improves upon that formula, making the energy attacks more dynamic and lively, the character models look sharper, and the game look more polished.
There isn't much more that the developers can do to maximize the game's look, especially considering that the game is released on last gen tech.