Has anybody here ever tried to beat Sarevok from Baldur's Gate (with the expansion pack installed, which makes him even harder) without any sort of dispel magic spell? Not only is he also surrounded by a bunch of other high level friends to back him up, but even if you cheap it and manage to pick them off separately, Sarevok himself is hasted (meaning he moves faster, attacks faster), can barely be harmed by magic or physical attacks (regular attacks that manage to land do 1-2 points of damage, spell resistance blocks most spells from even hitting him), has well over 100 hp (probably over 200) can cut through any member of your party in a maximum of 4 swings, and, to top it all off, is surrounded by so many traps that you will never have time to disable them all. Added these two because they were on my mind atm :) GS ftw btw :D :D You're literally the size of it's toe. Albeit slow, this thing deals huge damage.
One of ReTarDedFisHy's favorite "bosses" this thing is freakin' huge. He's downright easy with pals, but if you try to solo the damn thing, it takes a long while, especially without flashes. Hard to get to and even damage because of it's (their) freakin' tail(s) >:S AkantorAlso, in Monster Hunter Freedom 2, Akantor is a b*tch to solo. Also reminds me of any Fatalis for that matter. Just adding them here because they're cool :) :) White Fatalis In MHF2, White Fatalis is a real pain and does massive damage. But he also hates them ) These guys are fairly hard, but don't make a strong argument for hardest bosses, not at all.
ReTarDedFisHy hates Ruby's MP-leeching tentacles. Ruby has massive defense and even with Cloud's Ultima Weapon combined with the Omnislash limit still doesn't make much of a scratch in Ruby, only useful thing to do is to use Summon materia. Besides enormous HP, Emerald's cannons can one hit you and heal Emerald, same goes for Ruby too, actually (minus the cannons). There are a few good parts such as cutscenes and multiplayer mode, but simply put: Kirby has seen better days elsewhere beyond the N64.ReTarDedFisHy believes its between these two: Ruby WEAPON Emerald WEAPONOn one hand, you got Ruby, where he can instantly throw away two of three of your party members, whereas Emerald is almost impossible to kill without the Underwater materia. As neat of an idea the Mix Ability system was, it is horrendously unbalanced (you can literally get the Bomb + Cutter ability from the first stage of Pop Star and you've practically beaten the game from that point on). I am aware that there other games beyond this list of mine, but either I haven't played them enough to rank them or haven't played them at all.Īlso, to explain on why I gave Kirby 64 a 4/10, it's simply due to the game being weak in many aspects in my book. The Dream Land trilogy is too easy, Adventure is too easy, Kirby 64 is too easy, Return to Dream Land is too easy.I have nothing against this franchise being "too easy" since that's the main selling point of the mainline games.ġ) Kirby Super Star/Kirby's Return to Dream Land/Kirby Triple Deluxe (9.5/10)ġ1) Kirby and the Amazing Mirror (6.6/10) Though I'll admit that the game is "too easy", the same could be said for just about any other mainline game in the series. As amazing Planet Robobot was, it still can't beat Epic Yarn, Star Allies, Super Star (SNES), Return to Dream Land, and Triple Deluxe for me. Perhaps such adaptability is to be expected from an individual who can transform at will and adopt the characteristics of literally anyone or anything he comes into contact with.Įh, pretty decent list. Kirby is all-at-once video gaming's blandest and most exciting character. He's a super approachable platforming protagonist ready to onboard novices and younger gamers with his sedately iterative adventures, but he is also (and perhaps fittingly seeing as he's the product of a company named HAL Laboratory) the subject of numerous madcap gameplay experiments a guinea pig for new game mechanics and ideas. In fact, Kirby and his catalogue represent an odd dichotomy. boss Masahiro Sakurai, the pink one built up a very impressive library of games across a variety of genres since his 1992 Game Boy debut, Kirby's Dream Land. Kirby - one of the most famous faces (with little podgy arms and feet attached) in Nintendo's stable of stars - has been wowing players with his impressive abilities and sheer versatility for nearly thirty years now.