It's certainly a relatively novel take on the whole E.T. thing. You all saw that instantly iconic "Goddamn Superhero" trailer back at the 2019 Game Awards, right? Cute little alien FU (pronounced "foo" - careful now) returns to earth 20 years after he was taken in and cared for by hapless Elliott-alike Damon Ricitiello (last seen in Travis Strikes Again: No More Heroes), but rather than having grown into any kind of altruistic "I'll be right here" simpleton, FU is now an irascible, bloodthirsty intergalactic prince. And with Damon's help, he's here to take over the planet.
Now, Travis Touchdown isn't having any of that, especially given FU's propensity for hurting his friends. So it’s once more unto the lurid, deeply divisive breach as you plunge headfirst into a brand new, full-featured No More Heroes experience. Far from the quarter-measure of Travis Strikes Again, this is a masterfully-drawn pint of gaming stout, though you may find there’s a little bit of a head on it.
See, No More Heroes III has a bit of a timing problem. That is to say, the series is a joke. Don’t get upset – we don’t mean that like it’s bad. We mean literally, the series is a joke. It’s a comedy, it’s a satire. Check our reviews for the original No More Heroes and its direct sequel – we get the joke, and we enjoy the joke. The issue is that there’s only so many times you can appreciate even the wittiest bon mot before it begins to come off as stale, as hacky. And we fear that this third revue may be a jape too far.
That’s all a matter of perspective, of course. The elements that make No More Heroes such an arresting series are all here – the challenging, hyper-kinetic boss battles, the relatively menial volunteer jobs, the constant fourth wall breaks. It is shockingly violent in places, with FU making things personal early on leading to a sense of real and spectacular menace.
The spookily-empty open world of the original No More Heroes has made its return here – though now divided into multiple islands and with the convenience of fast travel — with Travis navigating it with his flashy, Akira-style bike. It’s an interesting decision to return to the structure of the original game as it was one of the most criticised aspects of the experience. Here, you’ll rocket around the map taking part in “Designated Matches” (simply arena fights with various different enemy types) in order to earn enough money and clout to enter a Ranking Battle with one of the higher-ranked Galactic Superheroes. Again, the mini-games you’ll need to play to earn enough to progress are routinely quite banal, though not in the pointedly awful way they are in the original game. In a sense, this actually makes things worse because the sheer boredom of, say, the lawn mowing task in No More Heroes 1 gave the intended satire a much sharper edge. The same task returns here, but it’s been made smoother and faster – overall spruced up, which simply begs the question why they didn’t just… put something genuinely good in there, instead. The game's is structured in a breezy enough way, it's just repetitive and at times you'll wish for a bit of a shake-up.
It’s an unusual halfway house between the original's arduous-but-artful progression and No More Heroes 2’s pared-back, super-fun NES-style mini-games. A sidequest that sees you mining for currency via small, maze-like dungeons is sort of vaguely fun-ish, but there didn’t seem to be any point to it. You could argue that it’s mining for coins, akin to cryptocurrency, perhaps, but… why? The original game was confrontational, aggressive in its theming. No More Heroes III isn’t. Unlike its predecessors – even the lesser Travis Strikes Again – it’s just a game.
And that’s not a bad thing! Not in and of itself. Because the combat here is slicker and more enjoyable than ever. It helps that the Switch pumps the combat sections out at a near-as-damnit locked 60 frames per second even in handheld mode. The open world is notably less smooth, but it doesn’t matter as much as the on-foot battles and thankfully these are a ceaselessly enjoyable experience. Enemy patterns are diverse, interesting and challenging – Designated Battles mix up the different foes in marvellously devious ways, meaning you’ve got to concentrate and switch targets with aplomb even on easier difficulty settings. This is easily done with 'ZL' locking onto enemies and a quick flick of the right stick changing your target. We mostly played the game with the traditional button controls (all the better for handheld gaming!), but the Joy-Con motion option remains available and as enjoyably visceral as ever.
Atop the usual suplexes, beam katana combos, spinning slot reels and finishing blows, Travis has brought over the Death Glove from Travis Strikes Again, allowing him to use special new abilities such as a powerful dropkick, a floating turret and a contextual time-slowing move. Special chips for the glove can be crafted back in Travis’ apartment at Santa Destroy, again consolidating what was a time-consuming feature in the original game into a breezier effort here as all the game’s upgrade systems are accessible from a single room. Another new feature is Travis’ “Full Armour” mode, which sees him take to the skies and battle in deep space using a sort of Gundam-esque mecha suit. These battles are pretty simplistic, with you holding 'ZR' to lock onto multiple enemy targets and releasing to fire, but the game feel resembles the rather brilliant Zone of the Enders and this vaguely Star Fox-esque action is a nice little change of pace.
It’s all very visually striking, with garish effects and the series’ trademark hyper-stylisation present and correct. As mentioned, the frame rate is rock-solid during combat, but it tanks a little out in the open world. The visuals are also lacking in sharpness, especially in handheld mode which can look downright sludgy at times, but never enough to pull us out of the game. Thanks to a thoroughly twisty-turny quirky narrative, we found the game consistently compelling – strictly no spoilers, but the story swerves more than an episode of WCW Monday Nitro, and in directions we never could have anticipated. There's some excellent music to enjoy on your journey up the rankings, too; we never grew tired of the victory music when we beat a Designated Match.
Which brings us to that oh-so-sticky of sticking points, the score. No More Heroes and its sequel both got 9s, but for different reasons: the original for its punk rock disregard for convention, its absolute dedication to its themes, its crystallised hot-blooded defiance; the sequel for its vastly improved action, superior quality of life touches, better and more frequent boss battles – despite losing some of its resonance and identity in the process. This swaggering third entry has fantastic moments and is bound to satisfy invested Touchdown fans, but ultimately comes in third place for us.
Conclusion
No More Heroes III has the faults of both its mainline predecessors – it’s a little more tedious than No More Heroes 2, and a little less meaningful than No More Heroes. It makes up for this, however, by being another inarguably impressive, balls-to-the-wall carnage-fest, a blood-spattered love letter to excess, and a Suda51 fan’s wet dream splashed across the Switch. The story it tells is cool. The game it plays is cool. Neither of these crucial aspects reach the heights of the series' Nintendo Wii origins, but nobody who truly gets No More Heroes could reasonably be disappointed with this third incarnation. The joke’s beginning to wear thin, but it’s all in the telling. And Suda51 can still spin a very fine yarn.
Comments 83
Sounds like it has a mix of some of the repetitiveness of NMH's open world with all the pluses of how NMH2 streamlined things considerably, which means it sounds great and like a definite return to form after Travis Strikes Again being so...itself
I'm down for anything from Suda. Been an NMH fan for a long time and was dying to see the series come back
The reviews have been good so far. Love Suda 51, but I will probably wait for a sale on this one. Now, Capcom, give me my KILLER 7 remaster on Switch!
Sounds like a lot of fun and it's refreshing to see a game that doesn't take itself too seriously. Definitely a future purchase.
Great, hoping my physical copy arrive this weekend.
Well I hope people like it, I know how long they have been waiting.
Higher score than I thought it would get. Which is a positive thing!
Sadly I have to wait until Pix 'n' love deliver my CE which has been delayed.
Luckily I have a huge backlog to keep me busy.
waiting on my physical copy to arrive either today or tomorrow, legit cannot wait to play
I'll be waiting for my Killion dollar trilogy to arrive from Japan next week.
I was afraid the review embargo being lifted the day NMH3 came out was a sign the game was going to be a catastrophe. Thankfully it doesn't seem so and is actually pretty good. I can't wait to pick up my copy soon.
Sounds good now do the Killer 7 remake please been dying to actually finish it since playing about half of it on my ps2 before it died on me and haven’t been able to since. One of the craziest stories in gaming
Gonna have to pass. I tried both the original and it’s sequel, and I just couldn’t get into it. I was hoping for a glowing review, sans the problems I feared it would have, so that I could be swayed. Alas… nope. I hope everybody that has been waiting impatiently for this, is happy with the end result. I’ll wait in a similar fashion for Metroid. Have fun!
Reviews are all over the place... which is just how I like my Suda games. Some will love it, others will hate it. Ben over at easy allies claims this is one of the best games he's played all year... something I didn't expect to hear from any review outlet. Excited to see for myself tomorrow!
Thanks for the review and this is more than good enough for me. Looking forward to playing this
That 8/10 feels somewhat higher than the rest of the article suggests the game is. I’ve only played NMH1 and NMH:TSA and don’t really feel like playing this one (at least not at full price). I know exactly what Stuart means when he writes “the joke is wearing thin”.
Some great reviews all around for this one. Managed to snag a copy of Travis Strikes Again very cheap so I'm actually going to play that through first but as soon as that is done I am diving straight into this!
I recall playing the original on the Wii when it first launched and I had a good time with the game (I love the fact that they used the Wii Remote’s speaker as a cell phone).
the game looks tempting but prob will skip this one
I played a little the first game on the Switch and looks awesome. Probably I'll get this after I finish both or at a 30% off sale
Awesome, can't wait to get my copy tomorrow, been a long wait but love that we're finally getting a third entry in the series. Sounds like the open world stuff maybe should've been left out but I'll wait to see for myself what I think of it before judging.
Part 2 was great because it got rid of all the tedious parts from the first game.
Played this for a couple of hours and genuinely can’t decide if I’m enjoying it or not.
The reviewer has also been very generous…..the open world sections are beyond awful.
The price will drop eventually. Next.
Great that this has a fair review
Reads like a fanboy review to me. I think I will need to check out a more objective review for this one to see what it will be more like.
It’s an epitome of the “game that is not for everybody”. But I know that’s it’s my kind of game)) Gonna snag me a copy today.
@Clarice really? Lots of negative criticism in this article.
I’m not so sure about this I was a really big fan recently played through killer 7 again on pc and really enjoyed it but I’m waiting for a sale Travis strikes again is one of if not the worst game I have ever played it mentions the joke wearing thin I think it already did that back in the Wii era
Oh my, it is so good ! Although, I hate the way unreal engine looks on switch, the game is piece of art. Great design, great taste, great gameplay.
Exactly what you would expect from it. Great! I need to get the two first games on Switch to replay them first, and then I'll get this. Love No More Heroes!
Another game with performance issues,
and Nintendo's answer is OLED.
The car engine has broken down, and they're taking it to the car wash.
@Clarice It's a game fans of No More Heroes will have a blast with. It's the third entry of a saga, normally you have already played the other ones when you go for this, so you know if you'll like it. What's the issue?? I prefer the review to be made from a fanboy of the series than from someone who has never played the prequels lol
Play the other ones if you hesitate, man, they're also on Switch, and they are great fun!
Sounds like picking up NMH 2 on eshop is the better option for newcomers.
Hmm, I wonder if this has a demo? I played some of the original but I don't really remember much about it. I remember not paying much attention to the sequel as it sounded like they'd done it on a budget and cut it back a lot. I'd like to give this a try but I don't want to pay full price in case I find the side missions are as tedious as the review says.
Jon needs to look up the pronunciations of “menial” and “garish”
So glad this game is great.
Worth getting when discounted for me.
The charm and wackyness shows through and the fighting combat looks as good as ever along with great music it's worth a play for sure...
However the open world gameplay looks like PS2 era graphics which for a full rrp game is unacceptable for me....
Steep discount purchase along the line.
I’ll definitely check this game out eventually, as I’m a veteran of the series, but as of right now, I’m brain-deep in Psychonauts 2.
i will start playing the 2nd one of the series and after that i will decide if i buy this…
@WhiteTrashGuy Yep Killer7 Switch absolutely needs to happen. 3… 2… 1… pointer controls?!!
I'll just wait for a PC port, which is almost a guarantee at this point.
@thiz have you checked out recent footage or the stuff they've been showing over the last month? Performance has been greatly improved. Combat is basically 60 and while the open world does have some rough patches it seems to get around 30.
I feel like 1 was really great. It was solid and knew what it was about. 2 had stupid cutscenes with Sylvia talking about some garbage the whole time. Like yada yada your being cryptic yet referential to the game as a whole but do u realize what exactly this game is? U swing lightsaber until someone's head comes off. Plus holy god some of the bosses and stages were the worst in 2. Don't fall off the roof or it will be a 10 minute walk back or lets fight 400 guys in a parking lot. And the Sniper boss just no. Awful all around. Ill pass on 3. I had zero fun with 2 and a lot with 1. Id rather just watch someone play it until I can't stand it anymore.
Ug it sucks the driving is back. Hitting a tiny post and being thrown off your bike is annoying as hell.
But hey at least the battles are better. I just finish NMH 1 again, first time on the switch, but havent played 2 yet.
"...put something genuinely good in there, instead." Sums up 98% of today's games with time intensive busywork. I always appreciated this "joke" in No More Heroes, i just wish other developers would rectify the problem. And the review's spot on, by Number 3 Grasshopper should have actually shown the industry "how" to make fun, engaging content, instead of cracking the same, "every game does this crap..." Joke.
Looking forward to No More Heroes 4EVA down the line .
This review was hard to read. Is this a “meta” write up I just don’t get? The copy reads like an overlong text message.
Sounds like the game is decent from what I could glean.
@Franklin But then there are titles like Astral Chain which look better than this and perform beautifully.
Some issues can’t be brute forced with better specs. You’ve got to write better code at some point.
One of the most upsetting moments of my life was I asked a. Foo fighters fan if they liked nirvana and they responded . . Who? Grr. Not a foo fan myself and I did like the no more heroes games years ago but I just feel over them xxx
I’m I the only one or does the reviewer in the video sound like a robot? No offence or anything haha
If your a true fan of the series, u know what to expect from a Suda game. They’re never perfect but always a surreal and unique experience. Ppl still complaining were never real fans of the series . This isn’t a game u can just jump into, it’s best to have played the previous iterations. I still own the original Wii copies, been 14 years deep with this series. I’ll be grabbing a copy at lunch!
I've heard that it runs at 60fps in combat, when it's most important, and sub-30fps in the barren open world traversal. I'm hyped to play it even though I'm praying for a patch that at least locks the overworld to 30!
Based on youtube videos that have a frame rate graph it looks like 20-30fps in the open world segments and 45-60 in combat arenas. Would love to see improvement with a patch! I'll also definitely play it in this state because I like this kind of game, love the music in No More Heroes games, and just enjoy so much of the visual design and special effects even if they don't run as smoothly as I'd like. After playing some games at a locked 120fps on PS5 I now really want to play everything that way! Someday...
@thiz even if the game is good?
A quote from one of the reviews
"No More Heroes 3 is certainly gorgeous, but the growing obsession with 4K, ultra-detailed, 60 frames-per-second visuals can be limiting to creative expression and at times even detrimental to artistic vision, especially when game devs court negativity by deliberately eschewing these sacrosanct demands."
I find the discourse surrounding video game performance odd. A film/tv critic might allow poor special effects to influence their review if the film itself is bad but would probably not bat an eye if the product was good..
Take season 3 of twin peaks. The special effects are laughably bad at points but the quality of the series as a whole is so high that it gets ignored.
With certain games I can understand the sharp focus on performance and visuals. If I am playing a competitive shooter or fighting game then poor optimization is going to impact my ability to play the game. With NMH3 combat is very smooth; most of the poor performance seems to land in the open world segments which doesn't demand much from the player beyond moving travis around. Audio glitches almost always get fixed so I don't even see that as a bad thing.
If a game is good a game is good. Give me a flawed personal experience than another overly polished AAA product with no soul.
@Chowdaire To a degree it makes sense. Graphics complaints aren't comparable to special effects that take up one scene. Unsatisfactory graphics can be more like the whole film was shot out of focus, or a complaint that the set/props/costumes are incredibly cheap looking and detract from the film but the acting and writing are great. But performance can be a worse issue than graphics. Performance with framerate dips, stuttering etc can be better compared to watching a film with the projector lopsided, or maybe better, watching TV OTA in the NTSC era (the young people have never experienced it) through the static. The show's there, but the sound is garbled randomly at different intervals along with the video.
This game isn't designed to be a looker, it even intentionally features pixel sprites, so if it also doesn't perform well, that's a real strike against it.
@Royalblues LOL yeah that's exactly what I keep fearing. It seems to me like one of those games you buy into the tremendous internet hype of everyone saying it's the legendary thing they've been waiting years for, you buy it, play it and think "omg this is the worst waste of time I can think of..." I've payed attention to it from the start and nothing about it that I've seen makes me think I really need to play it. Seems like an interesting $20 or so spend for an indie experiment, but for a lengthy full price game, there's literally hundreds that sound like they're not designed to waste your time as a joke.
Dang, other reviews are not being kind to this game
@Royalblues Solidarity!
Hype works so well. If I saw the ads, trailers, previews for this I would just skip by it and not even pay attention. Nothing about it looks particularly good. But you hear all that hype and think "I must be missing out on a sleeper that's amazing!"
But any time I fall for that, I get the game and think "no...it's just as bad as I thought...."
I’m part of the camp where I’m GLAD open world returned. NMH2 took out open world despite already designing areas because of budget reasons. Riding your Akira bike around and arriving in areas to kill baddies >>> boring menu progression and the horrid SNES minigames [the gym one especially can go die in a fire if you wanted to max out your stats in that game].
Excellent Game, I highly recommend this Masterpiece! Please Buy it!
@SnesSwitch I'm enjoying the He!! Out of it, I'm glad I've pre-ordered it. I've been playing for 4 hours straight, and I couldn't put the controller down!
Travis Touchdown in Smash would be sick af!
So...... anyone going out and paying 60 bucks for this game should definitely check out RGT85's video on it beforehand. He had some pretty nasty things to say about it. Also, as much as I hate to say it, Nintendo Life seems to, albeit rarely, give paid off reviews to games that are in reality far much worse than their review implies. I do not collect this series, but I research games for the Nintento Switch, and I just happened to notice a large conflict between what RGT85 said about this game and how it reviewed on Nintendo Life. Also, keep in mind it scored a 6 on IGN, which often haooenes when they review games on other platforms, but in this case, the difference in a 6 and an 8 is pretty large. considering the game is a Nintendo Switch exclusive.
Deadpool has a similar issue. The problem with breaking the fourth wall so regularly is that you run out of wall to break.
There’s no fifth wall that I’m aware of, so after the fourth is smithereens, trying to break it any further is just like driving back and forth over a pile of rubble.
@Retrogamindaddy RGT85 is not very trustworthy either ive seen some of his videos spouting things that are not true and besides majority of gaming sites are giving this game solid reviews.
@Retrogamindaddy I'd like to hear more about why you think Nintendolife does paid reviews if you'd like to share
you work for them? because I don't wanna go down that road if you do. I've been ganged up on by people on review websites before. and also to be clear I'm a huge fan of nintendo life most of the time. its just that occasionally they review bad games very highly and it is circumspect. but anyway, I only want to talk about it to you if you do not work for nintendo life or know people who do. because when I get ganged up on. you people who run the sites or develop the games, it feels like I'm not being allowed to be free to speak my mind, which is unconstitutional. but if you do not work for them, then it's fine. and we can can about it.
@RiasGremory RGT85 seems like a total jackass. I realized after watching him for years that I was tired of him. he just doesn't seem like a nice person in real life and he has never responded to me. most other YouTubers have talked with me.
Was going to pick this up but will probably get the first two on an eshop sale first
Prob gonna wait on a sale.
Not sure if i’ll like the lack of levels and have more of an arena based area’s where fights will take place, with an empty open world segmented in multiple area’s.
Combat and story seem to be great, all that matters tbh, but if it is as it seems after looking up multiple reviews, defo not a 60 dollar game
See this, GameSpot? THIS is how you give a review.
I adore this series. I kind of wish there was an option in NMH1 to switch between the PAL and NTSC versions. The black pixelation reminds me of the Scott Pilgrim movie. I bought both day 1 on Wii and have wanted a third game since then.
@Rainz I disagree. I jumped into the series with 2 on the Wii years ago, and I love it. I'm enjoying 1, and just picked up NMH3 yesterday.
@Arawn93 I dislike the jobs and riding around a boring, empty overworld. I prefer 2's mini games over 1's.
@Tempestryke
Exactly my point. You’re playing through the entire series before you play NMH3. Never said it can’t be done. However those coming in late trying to start at NMH3 could easily misunderstand the series and write it off. It’s not a game for everyone even though it has the appeal.
@Rainz Well, I didn't start from the very beginning is my point. I jumped off from the second game, and did not get to play the first until it was ported to the Switch. So you don't hafta be a series veteran to enjoy it. It's all about different strokes for different folks, like any other game series.
Such an odd company. Seems they get by on their weirdness. Looking at their history, most of their games have verged on average to bad.
I love me some no more heroes games but this one sucks 5 out 10 😞
Its not good 5 out 10
@Retrogamindaddy Who the hell is RGT85?
I love you Nintendo Life, I’ve been reading you for years. I remember the first NMH, my daughter went to nursery pretending to be Sylvia Crystal. Is she in this?
I love you Nintendo Life. I’ve been reading you for years. I remember the first NMH, and Sylvia Crystal, my daughter pretended to be her at nursery. Is she in this game?
Travis games have never caught my attention. But my changing attitudes towards gaming made me watch Jon’s video review; Jon’s passion is fab and I’m open to new experiences. As someone who grew up in 80’s satire comedy England I can dig the concept of this game, plus the 60fps combat. Maybe one day, at a reduced cost (only because it’s a c grade for my tastes) and with some spare time I may give this a crack.
But, the majority of the review excluding Jon’s dulcet tones, is quite negative and yet receives an 8? NL reviewer; be more positive 🤷♂️
@rushiosan A popular Youtuber who covers Nintwndo Switch news.
Really want to give this one a go. Probably will have to wait until January at least to start buying games again. (Except I’m buying Mystic Belle Enchanted Edition the 9th!!) 😃
8 is fair as it has a lot to offer fans of the series. It's definitely fun if you enjoyed NMH1&2 and does improve on them, especially the controls for the battle parts. Hope there will be patches for the open world frame rates in future.
I just finished this one after having bought it at launch and setting it down for a bit. This was without question my least favourite entry (not too far below TSA). It tried too hard with the plot (which really fell flat), lost all the charm, and felt more repetitive than any other entry. On a scale of "Is it fun?" I give it a "Sort of". Combat is fun (most of the time) but everything else is a slog.
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