Totally approps to have done all that in the treasure room. Considering that it costs a shit ton of cash to get, along with trying to beat the hidden boss.
Thanks for showing this weapon. I'll never get it, not good enough... I got a little question for you (and all the other bayonetta players here) : Did you have big difficulties playing bayonetta 1 too? I began like 4 hours ago, and the chapter progress is ok I guess, but in each level I die easily 5 times or more (due to falling down somewhere or getting absolutely ripped apart by the durga-angel). Is that normal for the first playthrough of part 1? I played 3 and pretty much never died in the story chapters. To me bayonetta 1 feels much more difficult than 3. Guess I wouldn't be a good umbran-witcher after all... Share your experience :)
If I remember Bayo 1 was difficult. I do die more than usual compare to Bayo 3. You're not the only one who suffers I had my share too. Have fun with part Bayo 1. 😊
1 and 2 are much less casual. If you are used to 3's fighting system, you have to imagine 1 and 2's system as something new to learn. In Bayonetta 1 and 2 the damage you deal comes mostly from combo finishers, opposed to 3 where damage is more evenly spread between all attacks. The secrete to the first games is learning to play around combo finishers, with dodge offsets and avoiding attacking in situations where it's unsafe. It means that you don't need to actually hit most attacks, as long as you land the wicked weave. Most enemies in Bayonetta 3 are easily stunned out of attacks or don't have an up close attack style. In 1 and 2, especially the enemies that get in your face, don't care much about you attacking them, a lot of them are almost guaranteed to hit you out of a combo if you just walk up the them and attack them. Learning to play without just directly attacking them is the easiest way to deal with that.
@@shun22222 Nah, just because 3 has a lot of systems that are intricate, it doesn't mean it's not casual. Yes, it has a lot of potential complexity, but it's still the game that lets you get away with doing the least.
Love how you used the moves in the pile of gold since the ticket costs 9999999 seeds 😭😭
What? You can get it for free after fighting Rodin.
@@ValerioRhys oh ik but the plat ticket to fight him costs 9999999 to buy anyway 😭
@@BigBatty56 you can farm them tho.... it will take less time but it still will be long...
I hate how Rodin wepon is so expensive
Living for the camera angle men
Totally approps to have done all that in the treasure room. Considering that it costs a shit ton of cash to get, along with trying to beat the hidden boss.
0:58 you did it bro 👏🏻
All I can see and hear is *bling bling bling bling*
The shadow remains cast!
I love you, man
I love you too... No homo 😝
Are you going to teach us to do demon slave combos after you teach us how to do weapon combos? We need to learn all the art of Bayonetta, sensei!
Maybe no... Because the camera is fixed at an angle. I can't get any creative shots and above all you can't summon demons, hohoho...
@@dojogameopen2225 Aye... Rodin himself says that such a technique is a lost art, so replicating it may prove a challenge.
Does it have the same moveset than it did in two or am I imagining things?
It's mostly the same as in 2.
@@Potidaon ok, thanks
Noice
Thanks for showing this weapon.
I'll never get it, not good enough...
I got a little question for you (and all the other bayonetta players here) :
Did you have big difficulties playing bayonetta 1 too?
I began like 4 hours ago, and the chapter progress is ok I guess, but in each level I die easily 5 times or more (due to falling down somewhere or getting absolutely ripped apart by the durga-angel).
Is that normal for the first playthrough of part 1?
I played 3 and pretty much never died in the story chapters.
To me bayonetta 1 feels much more difficult than 3.
Guess I wouldn't be a good umbran-witcher after all...
Share your experience :)
If I remember Bayo 1 was difficult. I do die more than usual compare to Bayo 3. You're not the only one who suffers I had my share too. Have fun with part Bayo 1. 😊
1 and 2 are much less casual. If you are used to 3's fighting system, you have to imagine 1 and 2's system as something new to learn.
In Bayonetta 1 and 2 the damage you deal comes mostly from combo finishers, opposed to 3 where damage is more evenly spread between all attacks.
The secrete to the first games is learning to play around combo finishers, with dodge offsets and avoiding attacking in situations where it's unsafe. It means that you don't need to actually hit most attacks, as long as you land the wicked weave. Most enemies in Bayonetta 3 are easily stunned out of attacks or don't have an up close attack style. In 1 and 2, especially the enemies that get in your face, don't care much about you attacking them, a lot of them are almost guaranteed to hit you out of a combo if you just walk up the them and attack them. Learning to play without just directly attacking them is the easiest way to deal with that.
@@ElectricNox 2 is the most casual one by far tho...
@@shun22222 Nah, just because 3 has a lot of systems that are intricate, it doesn't mean it's not casual. Yes, it has a lot of potential complexity, but it's still the game that lets you get away with doing the least.