

There's also game-feel a vague and often illusive concept for many games. It really is picking up what Street Fighter 6 began putting down. And you, new players, are able to glimpse get a taste of it with minor frustration. Fear not, any-and-all fighting game fans – Project L has all the filthy BS you love and need. The real business only comes out once you get comfortable with the flavour. Project L hides its sauce until you get a taste for the basics. which drastically deepens into an ocean of 'eff you' mix-ups and dirty, rancid set-ups. It is easy to perform a combo and super attacks.

Simply hold a direction and press a button, and a whole new attack emerges and disarms a common barrier to many a casual. Project L is indeed a very easy game to pick up and play thanks to simplified inputs ( a la Street Fighter 6's modern controls). Here's what you need to know about Project L at this early stage. It has blemishes here and there, a few burnt bits on the edges, but if we're sticking with this overworked creme brulee metaphor. Project L's public demo – itself a small taste of a game due to drop in the murky, mysterious future – is staggering as far as first impressions go. The proof, as they say, is in the pudding. The creme brulee is coming out of the oven, and aside from the small spoonful influencers nabbed while grandma wasn't looking, it's time to taste the dish. The first time the public have been able to play Riot Game's fighter, it feels like a great unveiling for the game. The moment the doors opened on Evo 2023, people flocked to the Project L booth.
