Description
A vast compilation of hunts where you track great monsters to gear up ever better. Published by Capcom, released in 2018 across Europe and North America. Hunting styles and arts to customise, the feline Prowler mode, colossal content and co-op for up to four.
Monster Hunter Generations Ultimate review
Hunting monsters with an arsenal of fourteen radically different weapons remains a pleasure of staggering depth, where every hunt demands reading the beast and learning its tells. The learning curve is steep and the interface betrays its age, but the sheer generosity of content astounds: hundreds of quests, six hunting styles, the Prowler mode, a sprawling bestiary. On Switch, handheld suits it beautifully, especially in four-player co-op. Veterans of recent entries will balk at some stiff animations, yet the density stays unmatched.
Rather than the cinematic hunt of recent entries, Generations Ultimate celebrates the chase as a workshop of styles: four hunting arts, flashy hunter techniques and fourteen redefined weapons offer a dizzying number of ways to play the same monster. Mastering a style then retesting it on a harder target endlessly renews the grind for materials. This compilation still charms through sheer mechanical depth. Caution: the sheer abundance of content and material farming demand real patience.
A generous compilation, this entry bundles two games into one and multiplies the count of monsters and quests accordingly. Hunting Arts, cooperative tracking and a well-stocked endgame invite you to forge every armor set. The prospect of mastering it all, weapon after weapon, monster after monster, turns the length into a goal embraced by the most tenacious hunters.