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Dynasty Warriors: Origins review: thrilling historical drama lacks substance

A warriors slashes enemies in Dynasty Warriors: Origins.
Koei Tecmo
Dynasty Warriors: Origins
MSRP $70.00
“Dynasty Warriors: Origins is thrilling fun so long as you don't overthink its hollow story.”
Pros
  • Sleek structure
  • Multifaceted combat
  • Thoughtful RPG progression
  • A few engrossing storylines
Cons
  • Serious tone doesn't always land
  • Repetitive as ever
  • Some exhausting missions
  • Thematically nonsensical story

Why do well-intentioned leaders always seem to become the very thing they sought to rebel against? Is violence inseparable from power? How many bodies must stack up to achieve peace? Don’t expect Dynasty Warriors: Origins to offer any insight.

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That shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone who has played Omega Force’s long-running adaptation of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, a foundational Chinese novel. While the hack-and-slash series has its roots in real Chinese history, Dynasty Warriors mostly sees that politically dense subject matter as a goldmine of war set pieces and historical melodrama. That’s allowed the series to thrive as an over-the-top soap opera — it’s Days of Our Lives for gamers.

Now, Omega Force hits the limits of that approach with Dynasty Warriors: Origins, a new starting point for the series that tries to take its subject matter a bit more seriously. It’s perhaps the studio’s most mechanically refined Musou yet, with more multifaceted combat, some exhilarating battles, and a closer look at moments of the Three Kingdoms era that Dynasty Warriors has always glossed over. But all the cutscenes in the world can’t hide the fact that the series still doesn’t have much to say about a historical era that begs to be dissected.

Changing the formula

After struggling to shake the series up with Dynasty Warriors 9’s open-world ambitions, Omega Force takes a more streamlined stab at evolution. Dynasty Warriors: Origins reimagines the Musou as a modern, narrative-heavy character action game. It’s loaded with cutscenes, it has straightforward skill tree progression, and it sticks to one playable character meant to anchor a winding story full of historical figures. It’s still very much a Musou, filled with massive battles where thousands fall to exaggerated attacks, but one that will feel more familiar to those who were raised on Sony’s brand of modern action-adventure games.

A sturdy new foundation that Dynasty Warriors can build on moving forward.

That structural shift is largely successful, even if it isn’t terribly original. For instance, Origins does away with its predecessor’s open-world bloat and replaces it with a more streamlined overworld map. It’s a compact space that acts as a neat, traversable hub from which players launch into story missions, skirmishes, shops, and side-conversations. A bit of Easter egg hunting and item collection is enough to add some needed variety in between battles without adding too much unnecessary weight.

The biggest impact is in its approach to story, as more time is dedicated to cinematics and social bond conversations that retell the first leg of Romance of the Three Kingdoms in depth. We get a more thorough explanation of the political context that led to the formation of China’s Three Kingdoms, as well as deeper dives into the figures who would go on to establish each faction. That makes Origins an excellent entry point into the series in the same way Yakuza 0 was for Sega’s own intimidating soap opera.

Two armies clash in Dynasty Warriors: Origins.
Bandai Namco

The series does lose a bit of personality in that transition. Dynasty Warriors has long been built on escalation, and that’s made each entry more over-the-top than the last. While previous installments have embraced that silliness, Origins brings the series back down to earth. The mysticism is light, there are no flaming tigers to hunt, and the costumes aren’t quite as eccentric. Those oddball touches are traded in for more straight-faced historical table setting with high production value — though thankfully some charmingly bizarre voice acting still makes its way in. That tonal shift will likely help Origins break out of its niche audience, but it does sap some color out of a vibrant series.

Even so, this particular format feels like a winning one for Omega Force. I get the sense that the studio has applied the right lessons from its recent string of great Musou spinoffs for existing series. I can feel the influence of Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity in its more robust storytelling. DNA from Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes is present in its social bond system. Each of those games has been mixed into concrete and poured into a sturdy new foundation that Dynasty Warriors can build on moving forward.

Refined combat

Though Origins is built to be a modern crowd pleaser, it features one change that’s sure to bug longtime fans. Rather than choosing from an army of playable heroes, players only control one character. That’s a dicey proposition on paper. The series’ core weak point has always been the repetitive nature of its hack-and-slash combat. A giant roster of heroes has always helped to alleviate that issue, adding more variety to battles. Origins is one-note by comparison, but Omega Force puts in a lot of extra effort to make sure its singular star feels like an adaptable fighter.

That starts with a deeper combat system that goes beyond alternating light and heavy attacks to wipe out dozens of soldiers in one sword slash. There’s blocking, parrying, evasive dashing, and counter maneuvers tied to each. Holding the right bumper lets players execute special attacks that operate on cooldowns, with each assigned to a face button. The left bumper has the same functionality, but for commanding troops to attack in specific formations instead. There’s an energy meter that can either be spent to unleash devastating Musou attacks or saved up to activate God Mode for a brief moment of invulnerability and increased power. There’s even a companion system, which briefly lets players raise hell as another character for a brief but glorious moment of power. All of this adds up to create a more active battle system with lots of tools to juggle and cooldowns to manage.

A warrior charges into a battle on a horse in Dynasty Warriors: Origins.
Koei Tecmo

To add even more depth, Origins features nine weapon classes, each of which has their own light control variation. Wheels are speedy blades that can be tossed into a crowd and then retrieved like boomerangs to perform flashy finishers. A Podao brings a totally different pace to battle, requiring patient swings and charge attacks to maximize damage. Omega Force doesn’t want players to simply stick to their favorite, either; RPG character progression is tied to using them all. Stats only rise when a weapon’s proficiency ranks up. That’s how skill trees are unlocked as well, and the currency to grab new abilities is largely tied to checklist missions that ask players to master each weapons’ nuances. It’s an effective way to incentivize experimentation, making one flat character feel like nine.

That system gets put to good use in Origins’ wealth of thrilling set pieces. Like previous installments, battles have players slicing up thousands of enemies and capturing bases to gain momentum in maps where the opposing armies fight a war on multiple fronts. Origins’ best battles are its most strategic ones, where players need to think carefully about where they lend their aid at any given moment. While its tiny minimap and constant alerts can be tough to parse at first, I quickly found a groove as I learned to bounce around to struggling allies to help get their battles under control and boost my army’s morale. Fights are all about gathering momentum and knowing the right moment to push forward with a grand assault.

The Musou genre is an acquired taste for a reason, and Origins’ one-character limitation eventually brings that to the surface …

There’s no shortage of exhilarating moments that make its story missions feel like key battles in a grand war. In one fight, I gathered my troops at a rocky choke point. I mounted my horse and led a charge into a canyon filled with thousands of Yellow Turban soldiers. It was a jaw-dropping wartime spectacle as I watched my army clash swords with their rivals while I focused my attention on tough officers, who I could occasionally face in one-on-one duels. Other battles have an entirely different pace, as I defend the doors of a stronghold or command my troops to burn down ballistas. That diversity of objectives helps break up the inherently repetitive nature of the series.

The genre’s thin action hook does peek its head out eventually. The weakest missions simply escalate the challenge by throwing more and more high health officers at me. The final battles of my chosen story route especially wore me out, as strategic battlefield management gave way to 40-minute endurance tests for my tired fingers. The Musou genre is an acquired taste for a reason, and Origins’ one-character limitation eventually brings that to the surface even if Omega Force gets much more mileage out of it than you might expect.

Peace is not an option

What’s less impressive about Origins is the ins and outs of its story, one that the series has told time and time again. This time, Omega Force hyper focuses on Romance of the Three Kingdoms’ earliest saga. It spends significantly more time with the Yellow Turbans, a rebel group born from famine desperation, and dives into the establishment of the titular kingdoms. Some stretches of that story are engrossing. The fearsome Lü Bu makes for an intimidating big bad early on — so much so that the story meanders toward what feels like an aimless final half once he’s out of the picture. I was even able to form a true allegiance to my chosen kingdom and its leader, Cao Cao, a charismatic guy who I truly felt compelled to aid.

Where Origins is less effective is in its central hero’s story, an ill-conceived folktale that’ll feel downright nonsensical if any of your brain cells happen to rub together during your playthrough. While the cast is filled with characters I could connect with, the main hero is your stock strong-and-silent, unnamed amnesiac with not a trace of personality. He’s a blank slate that players are meant to project onto in the misguided name of immersion, or perhaps just a clean camera lens through which we can see history unfold like quiet documentarians.

But that hero isn’t an insignificant fly on the wall: He’s the “Guardian of Peace.”

Real Guardians of Peace don’t ask questions, they follow orders.

With that early revelation, Origins face plants at the starting line. Missions where I kill over 2,000 people are followed by monologues about my duty to bring peace to China. I’m told that no one man can bring change after single-handedly obliterating entire armies, but then told the importance of putting my trust in the “heroes” running the kingdoms, who can, in fact, bring change. The dissonance of it all comes to a head when I get a special attack called Peacebringer, a powerful maneuver that sends all my enemies sky high and ragdolls their corpses back to the ground. In Dynasty Warriors’ world, peace can only be achieved through mass violence.

With that setup, Omega Force had the opportunity to put its deep knowledge of the Three Kingdoms saga to good use and interrogate the conflict at its heart. There’s a thoughtful story begging to be told here that questions whether violence and war can ever be justified if the endgame is well-intentioned. Even its increased emphasis on the Yellow Turbans offers fertile ground to explore how a group committed to fighting an oppressive government became an oppressive force itself. How does power mutate good ideas? Can one fight for peace within the system that creates it?

Omega Force doesn’t have an interest in any of that. Romance of the Three Kingdoms is solely treated as a fun video game premise that can be harvested for cool battles and lovable characters. When tasked with actually digging into the political intrigue of the subject matter, Origins is as silent as its hero. Midway through the story, I’m given the choice to side with one of the Three Kingdoms. Each one claims to have their own vision of how to bring peace to China, but no one ever outlines it outside of vague campaign promises. It’s not much of a choice; I just have to pick which guy I’d rather aid in torching his opposition’s rations.

A character performs a leaping attack in Dynasty Warriors Origins.
Koei Tecmo

It’s not that any of this is new for Dynasty Warriors — you can’t be shocked when an adaptation of Romance of the Three Kingdoms romanticizes history. This is never a series that has looked to make grand political statements about China’s history or criticize the ways in which violent conflict is excused as a necessity for the greater good. That’s fine in the right context, but it’s downright dysfunctional in a story about a character whose sole reason for existence is to be an agent of peace. Rather than accomplishing that, he only makes matters three times worse by joining a power struggle that’s never well explained despite being presented in a passive, uncritical light.

Dynasty Warriors has a reputation as being the ultimate “turn your brain off” game, and for good reason. Slicing through 100 troops with a Musou attack feels about as satisfying as watching someone carve soap with a box cutter in an Instagram reel. The best moments in Origins are the ones where I can fully sink into the popcorn melodrama of it all in between jolts of easy serotonin. But there are times where it feels like Omega Force is desperate to elevate its baby and have it taken seriously. Cruelly, it’s in those moments where Origins is at its most brainless. We’re left with a story about peace in which a Godlike being blindly becomes subservient to one man without knowing his vision for the future.

After an abrupt and puzzling end to my hero’s journey — one that left him with a choice that didn’t feel like much of a choice at all — I couldn’t stop thinking about the Yellow Turbans. The story opens with their tale, explaining their righteous rise built from government oppression. I quickly empathize with their cause. Then in an instant, I’m told that they became bad guys after that and now need to be destroyed. Why? Even with more time dedicated to their history, I still don’t really know. All that matters is that they’re Level 1 screw-ups and, in my route’s case, Cao Cao’s unexplained vision is better than theirs.

Real Guardians of Peace don’t ask questions, they follow orders. Maybe that’s why we’re still killing each other in the name of peace thousands of years later.

Dynasty Warriors: Origins was tested on Xbox Series X.

Giovanni Colantonio
As Digital Trends' Senior Gaming Editor, Giovanni Colantonio oversees all things video games at Digital Trends. As a veteran…
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