
Tekken 8: So much to love, for new and old players alike
The Hindu
Tekken 8 brings the 3D fighter back, adding in a host of features we did not know we needed
As Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat duke it out on the 2D fighting landscape for the crown, with a host of other games trying to claw themselves into the ring, Tekken 8 seems to have swept in out of nowhere, bringing the 3D fighter back in style with an excellent release after a very long time.
Back is the complex storyline and its muscled up fighting roster featuring a giant fighting bear, a panda, a cyborg and a mechanised space ninja. Which may seem pretty standard fare for fighting games today, but Tekken 8 has a lot more going for it, under its shiny new surface.
Heihachi Mishima is dead, at the hands of his son Kazuya, and the cycle continues as Kazuya’s son, Jin Mishima, stands between him and global domination. As the new head of G Corporation, and with the power of the Mishima bloodline pumping through his veins, Kazuya holds the world hostage, and the only way for countries to stave off destruction is to compete in the King of the Iron Fist competition. The contest is how Kazuya aims to control world powers, thus setting the stage for this new chapter in Tekken.
The story mode is impressive, unfolding with an all-out battle between father and son that spills across New York’s Times Square. Slowly introducing a new roster of characters, each with mysterious ambitions of their own, as well as bringing back recurring characters, takes the roster up to 32.
The story mainly focuses on Jin’s struggle — to not only win the tournament, but also keep in control the demon powers within. However, you do get to play as other characters as well, as you proceed through the tournament.
Among the new characters, one that stands out most is the mysterious Reina, a teenage fighter that seems to display Heihachi’s devil powers. The other is the impeccably dressed Victor Chevalier, a French war veteran with surprising abilities. The Cyborg Jack-8 is back with a new series of powers and to round it off is the Peruvian fighter Azucena, a mixed martial artiste who uses an evasive style of fighting. All of the returning characters sport new looks and enhanced movesets as well.
With over-the-top visuals and screen-filling attacks, the story mode acts as an appetiser to get you into different modes. Unlike Street Fighter, which locks you down on a 2D plane, even though the characters are 3D, Tekken has always opened up the complete arena for easy movement and depth.













