Not only does the duo need to find their way out of the forest, but a mysterious boy also offers Cereza a chance to obtain enough power to break free of the forest and rescue her mother. Here starts the adventure of two unlikely allies, Cereza and the titular lost demon Cheshire. Cereza cannot return the demon to Inferno (Hell). Inexperienced in summoning, the demon winds up stuck in Cereza’s stuffed toy Cheshire. Ignoring the warnings, Cereza enters the forest and manages to summon a demon for the first time at a time of dire need. Faeries have ensured that those who go into this dangerous forest never come out. Cereza finds herself called to the nearby Avalon Forest. After the Umbra Witches lock her mother away, where Cereza may never see her again, she studies as a witch in training with another outcast witch, Morganna. Cereza was born of a forbidden romance between an Umbra Witch and a Lumen Sage. We start at the beginning, at the very beginning of Bayonetta’s origin. Not only does the game take us back to Bayonetta/Cereza’s childhood, but it also contains a character with a connection to Bayonetta 3, leaving me with two questions is this a standalone game from the main titles? And is it still fun to play when you take Bayonetta’s frenetic combat out of the equation? Let me answer those questions for you. After the long wait for Bayonetta 3, the last thing I would’ve expected only months afterwards would be to be playing the prequel spin-off Bayonetta Origins: Cereza and the Lost Demon.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |