As you start to build your stats one of the big leagues will eventually come calling and then you negotiate your contract. It lets you create a wrestler from scratch (more CAW parts to be unlocked through gameplay) and starts you off as a nobody in a crummy gym wrestling other jobbers. ![]() Add PS: You can (and will want to) swap out the main menu track if you have another mp3 that you'd like to put in its place.Ģ2:41:58 GMT -5 miketheratguy said:I've only ever played career edition, and I love it. ![]() It's got crude graphics and not a lot of intensive effects so it should probably run fine on most systems. I started keeping records of what happened to my characters and some of the ups and downs were fascinating.ĮDIT: Almost forgot, the game has always run smoothly for me but then I've only ever played it on decent laptops. I've created probably half a dozen different characters and spent a combined fifteen or twenty years between them. If you go with the management edition let me know how it is, I can only speak for career edition but I think it's a hell of a lot of fun. Of course your technical ability has an impact on this. It sort of seems based on luck and fitness, so I usually spend the first couple minutes of a match wearing my opponent down with strikes before I go for the heavy stuff. The only thing that's tough is defending yourself, if there's a reliable way to consistently block and reverse I haven't found it yet. There's a button to switch targets and another one that executes strikes. Throwing people out of the ring is easy and fun, you just get near the ropes and execute a suplex or backbreaker or whatever and they go flying out (which often causes an injury). It's basically like the old Smackdown games- one button plus one direction equals a different move. ![]() Much of career edition is spent actually wrestling, and I don't think it's that hard to pick up. From there it's a matter of continuing to build your skills as you form friendships and rivalries and come face to face with all kinds of backstage situations and politics (endorsements, steroids, financial renegotiations, etc). ![]() The pocket version is free but ad-supported, costing $10 to disable ads and unlock all features.I've only ever played career edition, and I love it. It costs £7.14/9,74€/$9.74 right now, which includes a 35% launch week discount. Wrestling Revolution 3D is out for Windows and Mac on Steam. It’s bonkers and messy and sometimes far too chaotic, but in a way that makes it a very honest depiction of pro wrestling." The fighting system doesn't have any of the flow or precision, but the world is packed with competing feds, and wrestlers who move between them, feud, retire, switch styles, compete for titles, and even die on occasion. "I've played it a lot on mobile and it's pretty much the opposite of Fire Pro. He has already told us a bit, gabbing about Wrestling Revolution 3D's pocket version in his early access review of Fire Pro Wrestling World: I'm sure Adam will shout at us plenty soon. Chaos! Drama! Special matches! Huge matches! Furniture! Ladders! Weapons! Double rings! Wrestling Revolution 3D isn't pretty and it isn't slick but it does get that wrestling should be lively and weird. I'm glad that PC matmasters can once again smell what MDickie is cooking.Īlong with a career mode and sandbox shenanigans, it also has a booking career where you need to run an entertaining show (and can join in, of course). Resident slamfan Adam even declared that MDickie's old Wrestling MPire Remix was probably the best wrestling sim. MDickie is perhaps best known for the astonishing biblical sandbox RPG The You Testament but his wrestle 'em ups offer fine fightfun. Noted wrestlemaniac Mat 'MDickie' Dickie has returned to PC after several years focused on pocket telephones, now delivering Wrestling Revolution 3D to us.
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