All the Latest Game Footage and Images from South Park
Single player takes the form of a "Story" mode divided into five episodes and fifteen linear levels. The player will face weak minions (which change based on the episode), plus occasional sub-bosses which will try to escape into town. The final level is devoted to a unique boss fight. Players use quirky weapons ranging from infinite yellow snowballs to cow launchers and toxic Terrance and Phillip dolls. Every weapon has a secondary fire, and players switch between the four main characters when they switch weapons - each of the four kids shares a single life bar because of this. The kids will comment on game actions as they occur, with heavier profanity censored with bleeps. The kids will get angrier (and fouler) as their health depletes, until they finally give up on saving the town and go home.
With Umpah Umpah, Red Velvet has completely redeemed themselves, in my eyes, for the underwhelming and monotonous Zim…
Oh, will you look at that: I spend the majority of a column bemoaning the loss of Sistar’s summer songs, and bam,…
If there’s one thing I’ve learned to count on with MAMAMOO, it’s that they will always keep things interesting in…
This year’s neverending summer seems, well, neverending. Maybe that’s why Weki Meki is releasing the season’s best…
Pink Fantasy’s latest song, Fantasy, gives me some serious Dreamcatcher-esque, anime-opening vibes. Which is to say:…
Yukika first popped up on my radar as the artist behind the lovely, city pop-esque throwback Neon. Cherries Jubiles…
Seventeen’s latest, Hit, is a powerful, thumping, anthem-esque banger of a song that deserves a spot on many a…
This week marks the fifth anniversary of one of my favorite contemporary K-Pop groups, Red Velvet. They arrived on…
As we close the book on July and move into August, it’s important to remember that autumn—and its welcome respite…
SoRi’s I Am Not Alone is a breath of raw, fresh, emotional air in a K-Pop landscape that often seems suffocated by…
Advertisement