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![]() ![]() So, with a slightly heavy heart at the inherent aspect of 'let me show what you're missing out on', let me show what you're missing out on. And that's a damn shame, as with all this weird and wonderful dress-up stuff, Tekken 7 becomes a game that transcends fighting game fandom - making the standard and deluxe edition one and the same would surely put it in whole lot more hands, not just those of the most dedicated fisticuff gonks. If you're only in this for shits and giggles, as opposed to intense online competition or whatever, the $74.99/£59.98 pricetag, as opposed to the standard edition's £39.99/$49.99, is going to seem pretty steep. One proviso before we get too celebratory here: many of Tekken 7's most gloriously ridiculous costume options are only available in the more expensive deluxe edition. ![]() From Sexy Skeletor to three-foot hair to Murderous Bird-Jocks to Regency Mech-Deer to Cath Kidston Badass, tailoring Tekken 7's brawlers is an absolute delight. I never expected Tekken 7 - a fighting game, of all things - to be the game that made the joke funny all over again. Often, I think "surely we are now at Peak Character Customisation." The freaks and geeks of Saint's Row or Black Desert seem to have pushed things about as far as they can go without entirely breaking - a dizzying range of choice and absurdity, only hinted at in the days when we believed City of Heroes' dressing up tool was a revelation. ![]()
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