Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop
Tag:

demos

A love letter to Dead Rising 2: Case Zero, one of the best demos of all time (even if it isn't really a demo)
Game Reviews

A love letter to Dead Rising 2: Case Zero, one of the best demos of all time (even if it isn’t really a demo)

by admin October 5, 2025


Last week marked 15 years since Dead Rising 2 made its debut. For my money, Dead Rising 2 is one of the best unlikely success sequels going, but whenever I think of it, I can’t help but remember its prologue even more fondly.

The reason I consider Dead Rising 2 an unlikely success is that, on paper, the odds were stacked against it. For whatever reason Capcom made the decision that it wasn’t going to make a second Dead Rising title in Japan – which meant separating the team behind a break-out hit and creating a new one for a sequel. That was risky enough – but then Capcom also chose to place that team outside of Japan. Any scholar of Japanese publishers knows that such East-meets-West development arrangements are at great risk of unsteadiness. Plus, the first Dead Rising was characterized by a fabulously Japanese vision of an American town, plus US foreign policy and a very Yankee predilection for excess. Could that survive in the West, even being made north of the border, up in Canada?

Equally risky were the swings the game’s developers chose to take. Much of Dead Rising’s winning formula was retained – but the choice to build the game around a hard deadline involving vital doses of an anti-zombie medication, the in-your-face setting of a fake version of Vegas, and switching out beloved protagonist Frank West all stood as ballsy moves. But y’know what? It all works.

A bit Greene around the gills? | Image credit: Capcom

Dead Rising 2 is brilliant. If Capcom’s brass is looking at the performance of Dead Rising Deluxe Remaster and thinking about how to continue the series, they’d be well-minded to simply ignore the third and fourth entries. The second, though? That deserves to not only remain canon, but also deserves a remaster of its own.

A great part of the game’s success is in its design, of course. It’s tightly made, and even those riskier decisions land well. The item-combining ‘combo weapon’ mechanic is exactly the sort of thing that could’ve ended up hamfisted but threads the needle perfectly. With those dues given, one further thing has to be acknowledged: a great deal of Dead Rising’s 2 success must be chalked up to how its prologue carefully primed its most vocal audience, plus a slate of newcomers, for what it was actually set to be.

That prologue, Dead Rising 2: Case Zero, probably wouldn’t exist in today’s market. It also isn’t exactly widely available today – exclusive to Xbox 360 Live Arcade, it can today only be played via Xbox backwards compatibility, while the core DR2 is available more widely. Case Zero is a demo, a prologue, and a stand-alone game all in one – and it’s exactly the sort of thing I wouldn’t necessarily mind seeing more of today.

You can view this game one of two ways. Uncharitably, it is a demo that Capcom made the decision to charge a fiver for. Through a more friendly lens, it’s a brilliant-value stand-alone experience. It tells an original story separate to the main game, making use of mechanics, systems, and weapons from the main game but across a new area with a new storyline that tees up the characters, relationships, and world of the main game. For fans of the original Dead Rising, it was the perfect primer, detailing how both the Dead Rising universe and game itself were changing in a post-Frank world.

Part of the madding crowd. | Image credit: Capcom

By this measure, Case Zero may very well be one of the greatest demos of all time. Yes, it was a demo that you had to pay for – but it had all-original content, and ultimately cost about the same as a Big Mac. It was the perfect way for players to see if Dead Rising was for them – and for returning zombie-slayers to see if the new direction and team was going to work for them without shelling out new-release prices.

Being a Dead Rising product it was also eminently replayable, with multiple endings, many weapons to discover, and even a handful of optional survivors to rescue and side missions to explore. It was cannily released a little under a month before the final game, giving players plenty of time to experience its depth before jumping into the full-blown adventure. The value was there, but the price point was able to remain low because its costs were clearly amortised within those of DR2 proper (plus whatever bag of cash came from Microsoft that secured Case Zero’s Xbox exclusivity).

These days, there’s a lot of talk about us all wanting shorter games at reasonable price-points. We’ve got big publishers experimenting with titles like Mafia: The Old Country, cutting back on blat to get something out quicker that is hopefully no less satisfying. Remembering Case Zero, though, I’d also take more things like this – economically made ‘demo-plus’ setups that are cheap enough for an impulse buy, and original enough to justify one’s wallet opening. I remember it fondly.

I’d also take a Dead Rising 2 Deluxe Remaster. 15 years on, this is the other half of the Dead Rising narrative still worth exploring. After Capcom’s excellent remaster of the first game, it feels a no-brainer – and naturally, Case Zero should be included.



Source link

October 5, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Art shows RPGs coming this fall.
Game Reviews

Here Are 5 Great New RPG Demos You Can Check Out For Free

by admin September 16, 2025


If you’re looking for something new to play this fall but can’t quite decide what to dive into, these free demos might help you make up your mind. They run the gamut from traditional turn-based RPG to action roguelike and mech RPG-lite. Best of all, nearly all of them let you carry over your progress from the free demo to the full paid game if you end up taking the plunge. Most of them are also available across nearly ever console.

Digimon Story: Time Stranger

I recently had the opportunity to go hands-on with Digimon Story: Time Stranger for a couple of hours at PAX West and was pleasantly surprised by just how good it looks, sounds, and plays. It’s a crunchy turn-based RPG that seems like it’ll have a lot of Digimon-customizing depth to mine, but with the aid of some streamlining including a fast-forward option for battles. The demo takes place at the beginning of the game, sets up its central mystery, and introduces you to most of the basic systems. If you opt to keep playing, you can pick up right where you left off in the full release next month.

Release Date: October 3

Platform: PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC

Towa and the Guardians of the Sacred Tree

Imagine Hades but you control two characters instead of just one and you get a sense of the chaos and potential of Towa and the Guardians of the Sacred Tree. Choose a team of two from an assortment of guardians, each with their own abilities and each controlled by a separate thumbstick. If you make it to the end, a guardian must be sacrificed and is removed from your pool of fighters until the evil you’re fighting is sealed away for good. There’s a fair bit of town-building, build-crafting, and weapon-crafting on top of this loop, making Towa and the Guardians far and away one of the more interesting mashups I’ve played this year.

Release Date: September 19

Platform: PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC, Switch 1, Switch 2

Trails in the Sky 1st Chapter

The first game in the super-awesome but very convoluted Trails series is getting a remake and it’s almost out. Trails in the Sky 1st Chapter is a modern 3D overhaul of the 2006 isometric PSP RPG. It’s basically taking the world and story of the original and grafting it onto the more current gameplay systems from the recent Trails Through Daybreak games, including a hybrid of turn-based and real-time action combat options. If you’ve always been curious about Nihon Falcom’s long-running science fantasy series but couldn’t figure out where to jump in, Trails in the Sky 1st Chapter is meant to be the lifeline for you. It might not be as easy to hop into from a gameplay perspective as the original, but the presentation and everything else is a lot prettier and more streamlined.

Release Date: September 19

Platform: PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC, Switch 1, Switch 2

Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion

What if you combined Armored Core with Xenoblade Chronicles? It sounds like a match made in open-world mech RPG heaven, right? Based on my early time with Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion, the sequel to the Switch exclusive doesn’t entirely deliver on that promise but there are definitely more than a few flashes of brilliance. Titanic Scion has you taking big robot suits through sprawling environments to kill enemies and upgrade your powers, culminating in the occasional big boss fight. The scope is way more massive than in the original, which means it’s not necessarily doing any one thing very good. For anime mech-heads, though, it’s definitely worth a look. What it lacks in cogent storytelling and environmental detail, it makes up for with some really excellent mech progression and customization gameplay.

Release Date: September 5

Platform: PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC, Switch 1, Switch 2

Persona 3: Reload 

The best Persona is finally coming to Switch 2! Persona 3: Reload hit PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC last year, where the demo has been free for a while now. But the announcement of a port for Nintendo’s newest portable has brought a free demo to Switch 2 as well ahead of launch next month. Hang in there! The opening of Persona 3 is one of the slowest among the series’ modern entries, and the dungeon-grinding mechanics can get tedious at times. But the music, characters, and later game are all top-notch. If the other Persona games haven’t gripped you, Reload might have what you’ve been missing. There’s a bit more old-school dungeon crawling in it and the story is darker, more unsettling, and, in my opinion at least, ultimately more engaging.

Release Date: October 23

Platform: PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC, Switch 2



Source link

September 16, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (1,098)
  • Esports (800)
  • Game Reviews (728)
  • Game Updates (906)
  • GameFi Guides (1,058)
  • Gaming Gear (960)
  • NFT Gaming (1,079)
  • Product Reviews (960)

Recent Posts

  • One of Borderlands’ most hated characters seems to have been cut from Borderlands 4
  • Dyson Is Offloading Its V8 Plus Model, Now Cheaper Than Entry-Level Cordless Vacuums
  • Nintendo posts cute and mysterious animated short film, but is it teasing Pikmin?
  • Best FC Mobile 2nd Anniversary players tier list
  • PowerWash Simulator 2 launches later this month

Recent Posts

  • One of Borderlands’ most hated characters seems to have been cut from Borderlands 4

    October 7, 2025
  • Dyson Is Offloading Its V8 Plus Model, Now Cheaper Than Entry-Level Cordless Vacuums

    October 7, 2025
  • Nintendo posts cute and mysterious animated short film, but is it teasing Pikmin?

    October 7, 2025
  • Best FC Mobile 2nd Anniversary players tier list

    October 7, 2025
  • PowerWash Simulator 2 launches later this month

    October 7, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

About me

Welcome to Laughinghyena.io, your ultimate destination for the latest in blockchain gaming and gaming products. We’re passionate about the future of gaming, where decentralized technology empowers players to own, trade, and thrive in virtual worlds.

Recent Posts

  • One of Borderlands’ most hated characters seems to have been cut from Borderlands 4

    October 7, 2025
  • Dyson Is Offloading Its V8 Plus Model, Now Cheaper Than Entry-Level Cordless Vacuums

    October 7, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

@2025 laughinghyena- All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop

Shopping Cart

Close

No products in the cart.

Close