


Otherwise, though, the proceedings are snappy and intuitive. The animations are strange in places, too – you can move in eight directions, but jumping into the foreground or background snaps your character to a weirdly rigid stance probably more sensible as a crowd-control tactic (you can attack left or right while moving “vertically”, so to speak), but it never stops looking unusual and more than a little cheap. The game runs okay, but considering the generally not-great visuals, we’d have expected better.

Immediately, there are noticeable issues. Here, you initially pick between the titular Cobra Kai or the (frankly, far less cool) Miyagi-do Dojos, then get to work beating up every single living human being in your path. Now, there’s no doubt that Cobra Kai: The Karate Kid Saga Continues is a game with some problems, but to our genuine surprise, they don’t really get in the way of what ends up being a really fun, knockabout punch-‘em-up which offers a pretty strong pugilism experience while not quite scratching the itch that the true greats manage effortlessly (Streets of Rage 4 springs to mind). Cobra Kai The Karate Kid Saga Continues Switch NSP Free Download Romslab
