
As well as five different Musou (story) modes, there are also a selection of one-off “Dream” stages, and a versus mode that two players can partake in via ad-hoc.
#WARRIORS OROCHI 2 FOR PC PSP#
To its credit, Warriors Orochi 2 boasts 96 playable characters, two of which are exclusive to the PSP version. But this is a Warriors game, so that’s to be expected. For something that involves demons and time travel, the story isn’t actually very epic, being quite standard and dull. The premise sees a powerful demon called Orochi bend space and time to bring together soldiers from the Three Kingdoms era of China and the Feudalistic era of Japan, for no reason other than for his own personal amusement.


Warriors Orochi 2 is the second of Koei’s big crossover titles, merging characters from Dynasty Warriors and Samurai Warriors with an incredibly contrived storyline. If you’re not into these things … well, don’t.
#WARRIORS OROCHI 2 FOR PC FREE#
If you’re into these things, feel free to read on as we review Warriors Orochi 2 on the PSP. Either way, the PSP version is better than the Xbox 360 version, and that’s kind of ridiculous. Quite how this is possible when the PSP release crams in 96 playable characters (more than any other Warriors game), more game modes and full-sized maps with only minimal compromises in graphics and sound, I cannot fathom. In fact, it runs better than the 360 version did even after a patch.

The PSP version, small though the system’s resources are when compared to the 360, runs absolutely fine. In fact, it got a 2.0 thanks to the terrible state in which the final retail copy shipped, marred by such horrendous framerate and slowdown issues that it was practically unplayable. When I reviewed Warriors Orochi 2 on the Xbox 360, I wasn’t merficul.
