Thursday, November 22, 2012

Tekken Tag 2 Tournament Full PC DVD & XBOX 360 Version Free Download



Information:


THE VERDICT
With its gigantic roster, in-depth character customization options, and breadth of modes, Tekken Tag Tournament 2 is definitely a worthy addition to the franchise. That is, if you make it past some of the more frustrating and impenetrable aspects of the Tekken universe. As a way into the genre, it could certainly do a heck of a lot better. But once you’re in, it’s a perfectly solid experience in which brawling fans will find a lot to love.

Enter the Dragon
Tekken Tag Tournament 2 features 40-plus fighters representing a wide cross-section of martial arts styles ranging from boxing to wrestling to MMA to kung fu. There are a few characters that are virtually identical (Eddy Gordo, Tiger Jackson), but most feel like well-crafted combatants with their own takes on their particular brand of fighting. My one gripe with the roster is the handful of outright goofy characters like Alex (a boxing glove-wearing dinosaur), and Roger, Jr . (a boxing glove-wearing kangaroo who carries a Joey in the pouch). Some say such oddities are decidedly Tekken, but I found them annoying and out of place in a relatively grounded game.

VIEW ALL 4 PHOTOS IN GALLERY
Some of the rather over the top silly designs are counterbalanced by some of the best 3D fighting this side of Sega's Virtua Fighter 5: Final Showdown. Tekken Tag Tournament doesn't rely on projectile fighting as heavily as Street Fighter IV and the result is a game that features more in-your-face combat that not only hits hard but feels damned good. Blows are satisfying, as are the combos, which rely more upon memorization than some other fighting games. That said, some character pairs, such as the aforementioned Eddy and Tiger, appear to have advantages due to their fast and unusual attack—I wrecked opponents without bothering to learn their move sets. I will admit, however, that an EVO-level player would probably not fall for such shenanigans.

The game's called Tekken Tag Tournament for reason—you can mix it up in any match combination from 1-on-1 to 2-on-2. The game's team-based nature results in a number of incredible tag-based attacks such as Tag Combo, Tag Assault, Direct Tag Assault, and Tag Crash that lets you dish out big damage in high style. If you find those names intimidating don't fret; Tekken Tag Tournament contains a robust combat training mode (Fight Lab) and practice mode where you can learn moves to the point of mastery. I found these modes particularly helpful as someone who's had a long hiatus from the franchise. Additional modes include Arcade, Ghost Battle, Vs. Battle Team Battle, Time Attack, and Survival .

A Walk in the Spring Rain
Tekken Tag Tournament 2's visuals are as impressive as the fighting. The characters move with silkiness found in few fighting games. The outfits and hair ripple and bounce with each kick, throw, or punch. Environments are gorgeous, too, with some featuring second areas that become available once you put someone through a wall. Want to see poetry in motion? Keep an eye on the water effects when a capoeira master does the deadly dance in the liquid. Namco Bandai should be commended for its attention to detail.

The game's soundtrack is composed of more than the up-tempo, high-energy tracks that you'd expect to hear in a fighter. There are also a few slower-paced orchestral pieces that add to the drama. Namco Bandai also lets you use music stored on your PS3's hard drive as the game's soundtrack, so you can brawl to your favorite tunes.

Hardcore Tekken fans should love the World Tekken Federation, a free platform that lets Tekken players track an ungodly number of stats online. And speaking of online, I found the fighting action fluid with very little lag. Get some buddies together—either local or distant—and you'll have a blast.

Be Water, My Friend
Tekken Tag Tournament 2 is a beast of a fighting game crafted with hardcore gamers in mind—there's no watered down control scheme to appease more casual players like you'll find in Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3. Best of all, the game is just plain fun whether alone or with three others. Tekken Tag Tournament 2 is easily one of the best games of the year and more than worthy of an Editor's Choice Award.



Chances are, you’ve likely been turned off by a fighting game in the past what with the thousands of combos to memorize, strategies to learn, and teams to experiment with.
Tekken Tag Tournament 2: Wii U Edition
NOVEMBER 18, 2012
Tekken for Wii U will bring the Tekken franchise to a Nintendo home video game console for the first time, making full use of the new platform’s cutting-edge performance to deliver a new fighting sensation for Tekken games.
? MUCH MORE
TAYLOR COCKE SAYS
Try This Game If You Liked:
 And most of them don’t particularly care if you are into their particular brand of brawling. Tekken Tag Tournament 2, however, attempts to be different. It wants you to learn how to play it. It wants you to spend countless hours mastering its timing, tooling around with its dozen of characters, and making it your own. There’s a slight problem, though: It doesn’t make any of that terribly easy.
Players new to the Tekken universe will want to make their way directly to the Fight Lab to learn the Tekken Tag Tournament 2 basics. Acting as a tutorial of sorts (and a replacement to the traditional Story Mode), Fight Lab drops you into the role of the Combot, a creation of Violet Industries that can learn any Tekken fighter’s techniques and use them in training exercises. Each level of the Fight Lab mini-campaign is designed to teach the player how to pull off some of the Tag 2-specific fighting maneuvers like Binds or Tag Assaults. What’s more, it does it in a charming and often absurd manner, with levels filled with Power Ranger-looking combatants that toss pizzas and turn your head into a pig. Hell, one of the chapter bosses is a fat Ryu from Street Fighter. Silliness abounds.


Theoretically, a tutorial to teach newcomers how to get their martial arts on is a great idea. Fighting games are constantly struggling to bring new players into the fold, and a step-by-step set of interactive instructions could be a great way to do that. Problem is, Fight Lab teaches via the “trial by fire” method. Can’t regularly figure out the timing of the Bind into Team Assault? Too bad, you’re going to keep attempting it until you do. For those who already have experience with fighters, it’s a solid way to learn a few of Tekken’s intricacies. However, it is too demanding to serve as a proper newbie-friendly experience.
Of course, once you get into the fighting itself, you’ll realize that Tekken Tag Tournament 2 is still Tekken. It’s still got all the perfectly solid fighting mechanics that you’ve come to know and love since the series’ inception in 1994. You’ll still be working on your air juggles, your one-two(-three-four-five-six) punches, your precision blocking, and throw breaks. If you’re a seasoned Tekken fan, you certainly will not be disappointed.

The biggest change to the Tekken series is the advent of the Tag Assault system. By bringing in your tagged out teammate while your opponent is in the air, you can lay down ridiculous air juggling combos that seemingly go on for minutes at a time. With dozens of characters playable, the Tag Assault combinations are damn near endless. I’ve got my apprehensions about how well Tag 2 is balanced, but all that will only shake out once it’s being played on a truly competitive level.
Options are plentiful for those who decide to dedicate their fighting time to Tag 2. You’ve got your standard versus modes, your practice mode that allows for recording and uploading videos, and your Survival Mode. The netcode isn’t perfect, as I experienced a few slowdowns here and there, but they were few and far between. Those looking for a lengthy online experience will definitely run into hiccups, but hopefully the more egregious moments will be culled out by future patches.
But perhaps the most fun I had with Tekken Tag Tournament 2 was with the Pair Play mode. Designed for four players, it allows each person to take the role of one character each, to be tagged in and out at their leisure. The end result is a group of folks screaming and shouting and laughing all at once while the party chaos ensues on screen. It’s a mode decidedly not designed for competitive play, but man is it a good time.

Even with an absolutely bonkers-huge roster, fights tend to get a little same-looking. Run into King enough and his weird leopard head becomes rote and slightly boring. That’s where the character customization options come in. Want Marshall Law to sport some hipster glasses? You got it. How about a Samurai haircut for the Russian fighter Dragunov? Done. The cosmetic items largely don’t change the way that fighters do their thing, but the options are great for dedicated players that want to make their favorite characters their own.

Tekken Tag Tournament 2 Wii U isn't all that different from the game that dropped for PS3 and Xbox 360 back in September. In fact, everything that you got in the original release is right on disc. The main differences here are the addition of a few extra modes in Mushroom Battle, Tekken Ball, and Tekken Supporters. Oh, and a whole bunch of Nintendo-themed costumes. Ever wanted to watch a pair of bears fight in costumes from the Mario universe? Well, here's your chance.
Remember Tekken Ball from Tekken 3? It's basically volleyball but instead of scoring points when the ball hits the ground, you do damage to your opponent. It's still just as simple and fun as it was in 1997, but with the joyful addition of being able to spike a ball into the face of Jin while he wears a full Link costume.
The highlight of the additions, though, is Mushroom Battle. It works like this: You fight while Super, Poison, Big, and Golden Mushrooms float around the level. Grab one of the good ones, and you get bigger. Get caught with a Poison, and you shrink in size. Get too big, and your punches will constantly fly over the head of your opponent. But get too small and your kicks won't do any damage.


IN WITH THE OLD, OUT WITH THE NEW.
? NOVEMBER 21, 2012 EDITOR'S NOTE: For a rundown of the Wii U specific features of Tekken Tag Tournament 2, scroll down to the "Wii U Difference" section at the bottom of the review.
Chances are, you’ve likely been turned off by a fighting game in the past what with the thousands of combos to memorize, strategies to learn, and teams to experiment with.
Tekken Tag Tournament 2: Wii U Edition
NOVEMBER 18, 2012
Tekken for Wii U will bring the Tekken franchise to a Nintendo home video game console for the first time, making full use of the new platform’s cutting-edge performance to deliver a new fighting sensation for Tekken games.
? MUCH MORE
TAYLOR COCKE SAYS
Try This Game If You Liked:
 And most of them don’t particularly care if you are into their particular brand of brawling. Tekken Tag Tournament 2, however, attempts to be different. It wants you to learn how to play it. It wants you to spend countless hours mastering its timing, tooling around with its dozen of characters, and making it your own. There’s a slight problem, though: It doesn’t make any of that terribly easy.
Players new to the Tekken universe will want to make their way directly to the Fight Lab to learn the Tekken Tag Tournament 2 basics. Acting as a tutorial of sorts (and a replacement to the traditional Story Mode), Fight Lab drops you into the role of the Combot, a creation of Violet Industries that can learn any Tekken fighter’s techniques and use them in training exercises. Each level of the Fight Lab mini-campaign is designed to teach the player how to pull off some of the Tag 2-specific fighting maneuvers like Binds or Tag Assaults. What’s more, it does it in a charming and often absurd manner, with levels filled with Power Ranger-looking combatants that toss pizzas and turn your head into a pig. Hell, one of the chapter bosses is a fat Ryu from Street Fighter. Silliness abounds.

Theoretically, a tutorial to teach newcomers how to get their martial arts on is a great idea. Fighting games are constantly struggling to bring new players into the fold, and a step-by-step set of interactive instructions could be a great way to do that. Problem is, Fight Lab teaches via the “trial by fire” method. Can’t regularly figure out the timing of the Bind into Team Assault? Too bad, you’re going to keep attempting it until you do. For those who already have experience with fighters, it’s a solid way to learn a few of Tekken’s intricacies. However, it is too demanding to serve as a proper newbie-friendly experience.
Of course, once you get into the fighting itself, you’ll realize that Tekken Tag Tournament 2 is still Tekken. It’s still got all the perfectly solid fighting mechanics that you’ve come to know and love since the series’ inception in 1994. You’ll still be working on your air juggles, your one-two(-three-four-five-six) punches, your precision blocking, and throw breaks. If you’re a seasoned Tekken fan, you certainly will not be disappointed.

The biggest change to the Tekken series is the advent of the Tag Assault system. By bringing in your tagged out teammate while your opponent is in the air, you can lay down ridiculous air juggling combos that seemingly go on for minutes at a time. With dozens of characters playable, the Tag Assault combinations are damn near endless. I’ve got my apprehensions about how well Tag 2 is balanced, but all that will only shake out once it’s being played on a truly competitive level.
Options are plentiful for those who decide to dedicate their fighting time to Tag 2. You’ve got your standard versus modes, your practice mode that allows for recording and uploading videos, and your Survival Mode. The netcode isn’t perfect, as I experienced a few slowdowns here and there, but they were few and far between. Those looking for a lengthy online experience will definitely run into hiccups, but hopefully the more egregious moments will be culled out by future patches.
But perhaps the most fun I had with Tekken Tag Tournament 2 was with the Pair Play mode. Designed for four players, it allows each person to take the role of one character each, to be tagged in and out at their leisure. The end result is a group of folks screaming and shouting and laughing all at once while the party chaos ensues on screen. It’s a mode decidedly not designed for competitive play, but man is it a good time.

Even with an absolutely bonkers-huge roster, fights tend to get a little same-looking. Run into King enough and his weird leopard head becomes rote and slightly boring. That’s where the character customization options come in. Want Marshall Law to sport some hipster glasses? You got it. How about a Samurai haircut for the Russian fighter Dragunov? Done. The cosmetic items largely don’t change the way that fighters do their thing, but the options are great for dedicated players that want to make their favorite characters their own.

Tekken Tag Tournament 2 Wii U isn't all that different from the game that dropped for PS3 and Xbox 360 back in September. In fact, everything that you got in the original release is right on disc. The main differences here are the addition of a few extra modes in Mushroom Battle, Tekken Ball, and Tekken Supporters. Oh, and a whole bunch of Nintendo-themed costumes. Ever wanted to watch a pair of bears fight in costumes from the Mario universe? Well, here's your chance.
Remember Tekken Ball from Tekken 3? It's basically volleyball but instead of scoring points when the ball hits the ground, you do damage to your opponent. It's still just as simple and fun as it was in 1997, but with the joyful addition of being able to spike a ball into the face of Jin while he wears a full Link costume.
The highlight of the additions, though, is Mushroom Battle. It works like this: You fight while Super, Poison, Big, and Golden Mushrooms float around the level. Grab one of the good ones, and you get bigger. Get caught with a Poison, and you shrink in size. Get too big, and your punches will constantly fly over the head of your opponent. But get too small and your kicks won't do any damage.

You won't see either of the new modes being played on a competitive level any time soon, but they are both fairly enjoyable little distractions from the highly technical brawling that the other modes feature.
The biggest disappointment, however, is the lost potential in the Wii U controller. Outside of brawls, it can be used to read character background info or draw on their costumes. In combat, you'll be able to tap the screen to pull off certain combos and moves. It's fairly bare bones, and I couldn't help but feel like it could have been used for a lot more. Even simple menu navigation would have been a welcome addition.
So, while the Wii U version of Tekken Tag Tournament 2 doesn't change up many of the problems that we had with its original release, it adds some more casual-friendly modes for the Nintendo crowd. If you've been holding out, it's the definitive version. But for those who've already picked it up elsewhere, don't worry about skipping out.

Release name: Tekken.Tag.Tournament.2.XBOX360-SWAG
Size: 8.13 GB
Region: FREE
Genre: Fighting
Publisher: Namco Bandai
Developer: Namco Bandai
Release Date: 05.09.2012
Language: EN


BECOME A FAN OF IGN
















Trailer:


PC Requirement:

Quad Core i5 2.3 GHz
4 GB RAM, graphic card 1 GB (GeForce GTX 560 or better)
20 GB HDD, Windows Vista/7.
platform: PC / Windows
media: 1 DVD
SIZE PC: 5.07 GB
SIZE XBOX 360: 8.1 GB

Note: This is Torrent download file.You must be installed uTorrent in your system.



For XBOX 360

For PC Playable


23 comments:

catherine1111001 said...

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Anonymous said...

this is fake. tekken tag tournament 2 has not yet released on pc.

Unknown said...

yes this is fake

Anonymous said...

This is fake, don't waste time and bandwidth.
Check from their [tekken] website its not for PC

Anonymous said...

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Asim Khattak said...

Thanks admin for providing me the Latest Tekken Tag 'Tournament 2 Game Free Download and this is really awesome because it supports double-players in a single round.

Anonymous said...

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Anonymous said...

this is fake i tried all websites but there is no any download for pc i tried to download ps3,xbox,wii u emulators but all in vain i am studing for software engineering and i can't do so please don't waste your time

Unknown said...

Great Work
Tekken Tag Tournament 2

Anonymous said...

what is the password of the game if required

safialiaquat said...

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Anonymous said...

Hey i love this game and i tried alot to download but i fail every time ......i think those people are lucky that got ttt 2 ......but i never got it........if any one can upload this game for pc plz upload with video as a proof otherwise no one can believe on your post.......

Anonymous said...

Where is the video of ttt 2

Cr7 said...

Guys Thats All Fake
Tekken Tag 2 Is Not Yet Upload For Pc

Anonymous said...

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Unknown said...

xenia is the latest emulator for Xbox360 you can download it for free . You nedd xe file of tekken tag 2 of Xbox360. its redy to play. if you have the windows 8.1 or 10 so no need for emu you can drictly open the on pc or laptop by use the windowss.

Unknown said...

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Unknown said...

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