Sign on Options
Theme: [Light Selected] To Dark»

Def Jam: Fight for NY Updated Hands-On

Justin Calvert
By Justin Calvert, Executive Editor

We get hands-on with an almost-finished version of EA's upcoming street fighter.

Def Jam: Fight for NY's M rating is well-deserved--see for yourself. Click "Stream for Free" for higher resolution.

We've recently taken delivery of almost-finished PlayStation 2 and Xbox versions of Def Jam: Fight for NY, which is scheduled for release in North America next month. The sequel to Def Jam Vendetta, Fight for NY has plenty in common with its popular predecessor, but it also adds a number of new features that should appeal to new players as well as please fans of last year's game.

As we've reported previously, one of the most significant changes made to Def Jam: Fight for NY is that, although it retains the feel of a wrestling game, there are actually five different fighting styles this time around. The wrestling and submissions styles are reminiscent of Def Jam Vendetta, but you'll also have the option to play as a street fighter, a kickboxer, or a martial artist. Each of the fighting styles will afford you a large selection of different punches, kicks, grapples, throws, and suchlike, but no matter which style of fighter you choose, you'll find that the control system is the same. That's not to say that the five styles don't play differently, because they do; it's just that you should have no problem switching between characters once you've mastered the intuitive controls.

Equally significant as far as improvements over Def Jam Vendetta are concerned are the various arenas that you'll be fighting in. In addition to fighting in the regular wrestling rings (which you can no longer move outside of during a fight), Fight for NY will see you doing battle in various different bars and nightclubs, a subway station, a garage, on rooftops, and even surrounded by a ring of fire. What's great about the arenas in the game is that each and every one of them plays differently and gives you the option to try out different fight strategies. In the bars, for example, you'll invariably be surrounded by a crowd of onlookers who, if you manage to send your opponent in their direction, will push them back toward you, hold them so that you can land a few cheap punches, smash them over the head with any weapon at hand, or even assist you in the execution of a double-team move. When you spot members of the crowd holding a weapon, you also have the option to take it from them--the types of weapons available will vary according to your current locale, and they include pool cues, bottles, brooms, sledgehammers, bricks, lead pipes, and the like.

Like most of the other arenas in the game, bars will typically feature a number of objects that you can throw your opponents into before following up with some truly brutal moves that can damage said objects as much as your opponent. One of the bars, for example, features a jukebox, a pool table, large speakers, and a couple of wooden roof supports that you can have your opponent "interact" with. Many of the objects can withstand only a few moves, though, so if you're putting them to good use you'll often have to change your strategy or at least move to another part of the arena as the fight progresses. In other arenas, busting up objects by throwing your opponent into them can actually give you the opportunity to win with a ring-out--destroying a wooden fence that surrounds an arena or smashing a window, for example.

Perhaps the most impressive way to beat an opponent in Def Jam: Fight for NY, before we start talking about the spectacular "blazin' moves" anyway, is in the subway station. When you win the story mode fight set in the subway station you'll unlock the subway match mode, which, although identical to a regular fight in most respects, affords you an opportunity to throw your opponent in front of a moving train every couple of minutes or so. The result, of course, is an instant--and extremely satisfying--knockout. Other match types that you'll unlock as you progress through the game's story mode include cage matches, inferno matches fought inside a ring of fire, and our current favorite, the demolition match, in which both fighters try to trash each other's car--using their opponent as a weapon.

Justin Calvert
By Justin Calvert, Executive Editor

Justin Calvert's youth was largely misspent playing Commodore 64 and Amiga games. He left the UK's Official PlayStation Magazine to join GameSpot in 2000, believes that he's one of the best Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe players in the world, and is still searching for a game that's as good as Paradroid.

Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest
Conversation powered by Livefyre

Def Jam: Fight for NY

Def Jam: Fight for NY BoxshotEnlarge the boxshot
Not Following

Follow for the latest news, videos, & tips from experts & insiders

GameSpot Fuse

    Game Stats

    Also on:

    Games You May Like

    Users who looked at content for this game also looked at these games.

    See More Similar Games