There are many ways to skin this cat, starting with the Story Mode. In
Guardian Heroes, you'll partake in a grand adventure, playing as one of four characters initially. The outward appearance is that this is a side-scrolling brawler, pure fighting game. But, when you've blazed through the first level, you'll notice something a bit different happening. First off, you have branching paths, and sure enough they each offer a different experience and ultimately can change the game's ending. Second, your character can gain experience and level up, to the point that
Guardian Heroes allows you to distribute points among player attributes that can change how that character handles in the game. If this feels like a hybrid, wait until you get into the Arcade Mode. This looks like pure arena combat, but with a twist. You can bring a bunch of friends along for the ride, and by "a bunch" we mean a dozen! Fighting a horde on your own is possible, but not advisable. To help you on your way,
Guardian Heroes offers a Training Mode, and fans of PvP can tap into the Versus Mode for local or online combat. We mentioned the Gallery option that shows you all of the branching paths available in
Guardian Heroes, along wth screens depicting each area you'll explore.
As far as playing the actual game, it's a button-masher's heaven. You can take time to commit each character's full move-set to memory, or you can just start bashing at your controller. There are benefits to both, but as you might imagine, it pays to learn the moves if you expect to master more advanced levels. Your choice of character also has an impact on how the game plays out, since each one has a specific style and strength. There's no "right" way to play the game, and depth is part of why Guardian Heroes is still worth playing over a decade later. It lacks the simplicity of a side-scrolling co-op game like Castle Crashers, but in exchange you have a rich set of options that extend all the way to customizing the rules for PvP combat. Especially for retro gamers, this is a seriously cool revival with small but important updates; if you don't like the "remix" option, you can drop back to the original.