There is a strong hack-n-slash element in
Rengoku: The Tower of Purgatory, similar to
Diablo. In fact, the comparison to
Diablo could run pretty deep, because
Rengoku also includes a fairly good upgrade system that allows you to add body parts from the foes you vanquish as a way to enhance your character’s ability.
The story goes that in the future, instead of fighting one another, we will have created the Tower of Purgatory where androids battle for human sport. Kind of like “Running Man” meets “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome” meets “I, Robot,” if you can follow that chain... So, at some point a “mysterious foe” ascends to the top of the tower, leaving it to A.D.A.M to climb Purgatory and discover who is really running the show.
The way these androids fight is with patched-on body parts and weapons attached to their head, torso, or arms. Want a big blade? Put it in your left hand. Want a gun? Put it in your hand, embed it in your chest, or mount it on your noggin’. And then proceed to dish out mayhem to your opponents, with the understanding that they all have the same upgrades.
Rengoku sports randomized levels, meaning that replay value should be high. And if you like the hack-n-slash format and mad button-mashing action, Rengoku might be your game. I found the levels to be too bland, the enemies too overpowered, and the controls too dodgy for me to really get into, but there’s no doubt that this type of game on the PSP is a neat concept. Fighting individual enemies turns out to be a matter of whirling around like crazy and throwing everything you have at them in an effort to get the kill and steal their looted body parts. Grisly, I know. Boss fights are probably the coolest part of Rengoku: The Tower of Purgatory, along with upgrading weaponry. Bosses come in after you clear each level, and the battles with bosses are some of the more interesting in how they look and how strategic you can be to win the fight.
In the end, you wade through each level several times, since getting killed means going back down to the bottom and working your way back up again. With the wireless multiplayer and deathmatch features, much of the drudgery goes away, so it may be that Rengoku: The Tower of Purgatory just doesn’t hold up well for single-player – which is basically true of most hack-n-slash games, anyway.