I mean, that’s part of the appeal of ARPGs, and Chaosbane’s abilities, movement, and combat are all fun. It’s fun in Chaosbane to use your (eventually) crazy powerful abilities to smack down hordes of enemies in a single blow. I was pleasantly surprised when I started out as a Slayer Dwarf in Chaosbane to discover that it looked and felt great to play. There was Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor Martyr that was solidly ARPG, but despite my cursory enjoyment with it, it wasn’t a very polished game. It’s about time that someone took the action role-playing game (ARPG) formula and applied it to the fantasy Warhammer setting. Of course, Warhammer video games don’t have the best track record, so I tempered my hype accordingly. Part Vermintide, part Diablo, Chaosbane looked exactly like the type of game my friends and I could sink hundreds of hours into. Developed by Eko Software, makers of the How to Survive Series, this was a hotly anticipated action role-playing game.
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