Demon Chaos

Demon Chaos known in Japan as Ikusagami (戦神, lit. "War God"), is a video game co-developed by Genki and Now Production for the PlayStation 2 (PS2) home game console. The game was published by Genki in Japan on November 24, 2005 and by Konami in PAL regions in 2007.

Demon Chaos
Developer(s)Genki, Now Production
Publisher(s)Genki, Konami
Platform(s)PlayStation 2
ReleasePlayStation 2
  • JP: November 24, 2005[1]
  • EU: April 27, 2007[2]
  • AU: May 11, 2007
PlayStation Network
  • JP: August 20, 2014
Genre(s)Hack and slash, Action
Mode(s)Single-player

It is set in feudal Japan in the 16th century and revolves around a priestess who has been given eternal youth until she exterminates all the demons. She has been given charge of a mystical beast from the gods, Inugami, which is controlled by the player.

The game is in the vein of the well-known Dynasty Warriors series, in which the player battles crowd after crowd of hostile enemies. The unique aspect of the game is that up to 65,535 enemies can be on-screen at once.[3]

Reception

Demon Chaos received mostly mediocre reviews, currently holding a 62 out of 100 on Metacritic.[4]

gollark: I suggested procedurally generated nebulae. On Bad Ideas.
gollark: Er, sorry, anything scroll based is going to come under "scroll add" and probably come either soonish or never.
gollark: Scroll stats?
gollark: Does anyone have suggestions for my hatchery other than scroll-add?
gollark: I'm working on using the *seeeecret* EATW formula to hopefully keep dragons from getting sick on my hatchery, though since I only have a little bit from `archive.org` it's not going too well.

References

  1. Konami staff. 戦神-いくさがみ- [Ikusagami] (in Japanese). Genki. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  2. Bramwell, Tom (April 27, 2007). "What's New? (27th April, 2007)". Eurogamer. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  3. IGN staff (August 10, 2005). "Genki Takes on Dynasty Warriors". IGN. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  4. "Demon Chaos (PS2)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on April 9, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2012.


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