Saturday, April 23, 2011

I haven't been blogging but i'm back now for daily blogging lets start white a game

The games name should be known for any otaku or manga and anime fans because its the best game when you can play white you're favorite character like Luffy from One piece or Naruto its so cool. 
If you haven't bought the game or don't have the money just download a emulator and the game i will put a link for them both here.

http://www.emulator-zone.com/files/emulators/gba/nocashgba/no$gba-w.2.6a.zip

hhttp://dc94.4shared.com/download/quxFIu_h/NDS-ROMJump_Ultimate_Stars__Sa.rar?tsid=20110423-143259-82433795





Screenshots 



THE STORY SO FAR
For me the story is not a big deal you just go in a ship in the galaxy and travel to different world that are manga,anime worlds and defeat characters white you're power

SINGLE PLAYER: GAMEPLAY
just go white the flow to different worlds

MULTIPLAYER: GAMEPLAY
never played so don't now

GRAPHICS
2d in Super Smash Brothers fighting game 

SOUND
great music form different anime and mangas

IN CONCLUSION
best game ever


here some info about the game from 

With all the new next generation console systems finally out on the market, what could possibly be making me put down my Xbox 360 and Wii controllers in favor of a Nintendo DS imported 2D fighter featuring manga characters where everything is written in Japanese (a language I can't read or speak). I've got three words for you – Pure. Gaming. Bliss.

THE STORY SO FAR
Not quite sure what the story of the game is or even if there is one, because like I said, the game is imported over from Japan, and I can't make heads or tails of the language, but what I do know is this: the Jump magazines are a big hit in Japan, featuring a ton of different manga series collected in each volume, and Shonen Jump is even a popular manga over here (one in which I happen to collect). Jump Ultimate Stars takes the characters from all the series covered in the Jump series, and puts them together and makes them battle it out with each other. Some characters are playable, some are support, and some give you bonuses. You'll work your way through the galaxy, visiting various themed worlds based on each series, and unlocking these character cards as you go.
So since there is no possible way for me to know the exact story, and thus you probably won't either unless you know the language, you should still absolutely get this game if you are a manga or anime fan who knows their stuff, because though it is in a foreign language, you wont really need to know any once you get a feel for where everything is and what unknown symbols do what. You won't know the names of all the worlds and characters and mission objectives if you don't know the moves, but there are FAQs out there to help you with what you don’t know.

SINGLE PLAYER: GAMEPLAY
The core of the single player game will be playing the story mode, traveling through the universe to visit the different theme worlds so that you can ultimately get to the end and unlock all the cards that you can. As you advance through the worlds, you'll have different missions open up, and to complete the world (and color it) you'll have to beat each mission and fulfill at least one mission objective in each mission. Many of the missions are things you can unlock naturally just by playing the game to best of your ability and trying to win the mission as quick as you can, while others require things like protect someone for so long, knock someone out with a support character, etc. There are also missions where you don't get to use your made decks, but rather must battle with what is designated for that particular level. It is here, where you can't read what you are supposed to do, a FAQ comes in real handy. You've also got the J-Arena that lets you advance up ranks through certain game types, allowing you to get some gems and practice up with your teams to see how good they are when put into battle.
The gems play an important part, because you must have them so that you can upgrade your player cards. You see, whenever you get a player card from playing through the single player game, it will always be a help card, and it will always be that unless you give away the gems needed to upgrade the card to a battle character or support character. There are several different colored gems that appear throughout play, though whether certain colors come from certain actions or not I couldn't tell you since I, once again, can't read anything in the game.
The cards play an important function in the game, as they are what is ultimately the reason while you keep playing, trying to perfect that ultimate deck. Instead of thinking of the deck like a battle deck of Magic cards, it would probably be best to call them a "page" as the cards are placed upon a square grid to make a full page that looks as if it would appear in a manga. Help characters are always one card and can easily be placed in any empty spot. Help cards, once placed, give the player they are attached to special abilities depending on what their specialty is. Help characters can also have special attachments depending on if they have like characteristics, such as two friends from the same manga
Battles all take place on relatively close levels, though it still gives you enough room to do some planning and yet always have the fighting tight and tense. The general idea is to do enough damage to either kill the character (their color starts bright and gets more black and white the farther the health depletes) or knock them off the level (much like Super Smash Brothers). Actually, if you are thinking the game sounds like Super Smash Brothers with manga characters, then you wouldn't be far off. At the end, whoever has the most points, wins the game. There are also both good and bad powerups scattered throughout the levels, hidden within chests and such, that will grant you improved power, reduced speed, health, poison, reverse your controls, etc.
The game is fun because there aren't too many complicated maneuvers to memorize like some fighters, but rather it comes to strategy and finding the best deck that works for you and knowing when to use your characters. In the game, the A-button jumps, B-button is a light attack, Y-button is a heavy attack, and the X-button is your special attacks. You can also switch characters by tapping on their portrait on the screen or pressing the L or R button they are attached to. Beyond pushing the buttons, by pressing on different directions on the directional pad (up, left or right, and down) you'll alter the move to something different. All in all, if I was to take a guess, there are about 10 to 12 moves per character. Though all the light and heavy attacks are available at all times, support characters and special attacks will only be available if your special gauge is built up enough so that a number appears to the side of it, showing how many times you can use one of the two.

MULTIPLAYER: GAMEPLAY
If you can access the DS ability to play Wi-Fi games, then get ready to find the heart of the game: battling against human players. Since the game is only out in Japan and must be imported, you'll be playing players mostly from Japan, and though it takes a bit of time to find players to connect to and there is slowdown given how far away you are playing people from, it still remains a blast. These Japanese players are hardcore, and have all the top cards, so most of the time you'll be spent in awe wondering when you'll get those cards, but every so often you'll own someone, and you'll feel like the top player in the world. What's especially nice is that should you find a player with an absolutely top-notch deck, you can save their page info to your DS, and you can match up your own deck to look like that as long as you have the same cards; a great feature that lets you see who people are using and help you find combos you might not have thought would've worked.

GRAPHICS
Bright and cheerful, featuring a lot of pizzazz and flashy moves, everything looks extremely well animated, plus if you know anything about the manga or seen the anime, these characters look practically identical to their respective series.

SOUND
The music is okay, but the sound of battling is what really sells the package, as they feature a ton of love, as the multi hits, fireballs, and all other sorts of maneuvers feature plenty of humor and impact depending on what the move calls for (a powerful palm hit or someone riding at you on a scooter).

IN CONCLUSION
If you love anime and manga and own a Nintendo DS (an American bought one will play this so no need to buy a Japanese DS to play) then you must get Jump Ultimate Stars. If you love Super Smash Brothers type fighting games, then you must get Jump Ultimate Stars. If you love quality games, then you must get Jump Ultimate Stars. Due to copyright laws, the game will probably never appear here in an English form, so suck up any fear about owning a Japanese game and import this one right away. If it were a RPG where story was everything, I'd tell you to pass, but since only the menus contain writing and it's all about the fighting, language isn't a barrier you need to worry about.