

A newcomer is apt to struggle to even hit an experienced player, who can literally fly circles around them. Mobile suits boost around 3D fields at incredible speed, firing laser blasts and stringing together lengthy beam saber combos that can remove more than half of a life gauge. The game itself plays like a mix between Sega's classic Virtual-On series and Konami's Zone of the Enders, with action that tilts toward the competitive end of the scale. Your favorite mobile suit is almost certainly in Gundam Extreme Vs., even if it happens to be a weirdo obscurity like Victory Gundam's Gedlav, which is basically just a big tire with guns. The sheer amount of choice on offer is overwhelming, even for a longtime Gundam nut like myself, but also kind of cool. Maxi Boost On (it's getting exhausting to write this), you can choose from a roster encompassing some 183 mobile suits across 36 different series-from the mighty Unicorn Gundam to Char's humble Zaku. Maxi Boost On is the real deal a full port of the original arcade with a host of additioanl features. Unlike the somewhat stripped down Gundam Versus, Gundam Extreme Vs.

Still, its core strengths as one of the best Gundam games remain evident. It feels like a game out of time-a mix of elements better suited for the PlayStation 3 or Dreamcast than a modern console. It feels very strange to play a game that's obviously designed from the ground up for arcades, with the single-player mode and unlockables only being added after the fact. Maxi Boost On is necessarily a bit of an anachronism. In heading to PlayStation 4, Gundam Extreme Vs.
