You kick down a door, there's a clunky cutscene. Your character just lets them get situated before bothering to attack them? You press a button, there's a clunky cutscene. You enter a room, and there's a cutscene of enemies slowly plodding into the room and walking into position. In the campaign, gameplay is frequently interrupted by stupid cutscenes. The touch screen aiming is also implemented the wrong way - it should behave like an analog stick (further from the center making you turn faster) but instead it's implemented like a mouse (requiring you to repeatedly swipe your finger along the screen to turn). Unless you're frantically swiping across the screen, you can barely even get the crosshair to move. Touch-screen aiming *should* work (it worked very well for Metroid Prime: Hunters) but the *maximum* sensitivity is unbearably slow. You will find the C-stick isn't sensitive enough while looking (it takes over 2 seconds to do a 360) and is too imprecise when aiming. The C-Stick on the New 3DS isn't suitable for aiming, so getting the crosshair to settle on something is an exercise in futility. The controls are utter garbage - there are two modes, C-Stick and touch screen.
I only made it a few minutes into the demo, but the controls are so unbearably bad that you couldn't pay me to play further. I only made it a few minutes into the demo, but the controls are so unbearably bad that you couldn't One of the worst games I've ever played. Mansard Kanaoth, the only half-orc on the council and the most vocal detractor of the Voice.One of the worst games I've ever played.The Voice of Telos, the thirteenth member of the council and de facto leader.One of the councilors, Knight-Vindicator Mansard Kanaoth, began trying to capitalize on these developments to undermine the Voice of Telos with the goal of ultimately declaring himself a successor to the Witch-King. Concerned, the Ironfell Council sent agents to investigate the ruin, as well as to seek out any other evidence of related threats to their power. In the Year of the Purloined Statue, 1477 DR, the ruined Castle Perilous shed its crumbling exterior to reveal a rejuvenated and evil-looking fortress beneath. As most Vaasans and outsiders did not know the nature of this parasitic relationship to Telos, it was widely assumed that the Ironfell Council's role was to commune with the primordial, who was publicly venerated by the Warlock Knights similarly to a deity. The council was named in honor of ironfell, a magical metal harvested from the primordial Telos which granted the Warlock Knights many of their powers. Although each Knight-Councilor had a suite of rooms to themselves in the Citadel, they preferred to come together as little as possible, and instead spend time in the lands which they individually ruled directly. The council met five days out of every month at the Citadel of the Iron Sky in Telos City to debate and decide issues of government. Apart from being found in Outland, it can also be mined on the Isle of Quel'Danas, along with all the other Outland ores. This is because Fel Iron is likely a corrupted version of the Iron found in Kalimdor and Eastern Kingdoms. It is found in rocky regions, as well as those heavily populated by demons. The council held the power to conscript its citizens into military service, including high ranking Knights and their entire armies. Fel Iron ore can be smelted into Fel Iron bars. The Ironfell Council was the undisputed pinnacle of Vaasa's feudal hierarchy, and one of its primary duties was to perpetuate this hierarchy by allocating land and vassals to Warlock Knights as they ascended the order's ranks. The final member of the council, and also its leader, was the mysterious and long-lived founder of the Warlock Knights known only as the Voice of Telos. As members of the Ironfell Council, these Vindicators were known as Knight-Councilors. Among them were the twelve most powerful members of the Warlock Knights who had attained the rank of Vindicator, meaning they were powerful land-owning feudal nobles with their own standing armies and to whom lesser-ranked Knights swore their allegiance. The council was made up of thirteen members.