Or as the game puts it, Human if you are new to the series, and Devil Hunter if you’ve “faced the demonic hordes of Devil May Cry before and lived to tell the tale.” Additional difficulties are unlockable as well, for those that enjoy punishment. Either Human or Devil Hunter, Human being the equivalent of easy, and Devil Hunter being the equivalent of normal. I wasn’t able to test the PS3 version so I don’t know if it has the same sound issue, but I imagine that it does.īefore you dive into the game, you will select the difficulty from the in-game menu (or “system menu”). You will encounter this often throughout the game and it’s definitely something that Capcom should have fixed, but thankfully all the dialogue is supported with sub-titles, so you won’t have to miss any line of speech. While the music is fine, often the voices are spoken so quietly that they are very hard to make out, and the sound effects and music over power it. Right away you’ll notice that the game has some annoying issues with the sound. When you first fire up the game, you’ll be assaulted with a very cool intro sequence that has an all new metal track blaring and will highlight parts of the story that you’ll see during the game as well as shining the spotlight on some of Devil May Cry 4’s more dramatic moments and it’s sappy love story, interspersed with glances at the gameplay.
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