Fighting games are trending a bit like the Racing genre; it used to be that a racing game was just about picking a car and hitting the track. Now you have to virtually be a mechanic to play a racing game... The heritage of
Soul Calibur V includes some straightforward arena battling, which is still present in this version. Almost everything else is on an entirely different plane. The simplest mode to describe and play is the Story, subtitled "1607 A.D." Fans of the series will be excited to fill in parts of the Soul universe not yet addressed, but you don't have to care one bit about the narrative to enjoy the action. As you traverse stages in Story Mode, you'll hone your skills against successively harder opponents, up to the final confrontation. You get some sense of the breadth of characters and fighting styles during Story Mode, and you'll hopefully master the basic controls. You can break away from this gradual progression at any time and launch a multiplayer session on Xbox LIVE, where
Soul Calibur V really comes to life. There are three basic components to playing on LIVE: You can compete in one-on-one combat, join ad hoc battles with larger groups, or jump into a massive "Town Hall" mode called "Global Colosseo." Only the one-on-one matches confer ranking points, which show up on the LIVE leaderboards, and on your player "license." Group battles work a bit like any LIVE Party mode, where you can be a spectator or mix it up with your friends who are also playing the game. This stuff has no impact on ranking, but not everyone is obsessed with ranking, after all.
Outside of the main story and online play, you can set up local battles or play Arcade Mode to hone your skills. There are also formal training options, and for veteran players, there's a special mode called "Legendary Souls" that pits you against A.I. fighters at their biggest and baddest. If you've played even one of the previous games in the series, you'll immediately be in familiar territory. There are some new actions available during battle, such as the Just Guard, which works only when perfectly timed, to knock away most enemy attacks. The basic rules of combat remain the same, with options to defeat opponents through lots of small, deft attacks or crush them with raw-power attacks and throws. The controls take some getting used to, if you're just coming back to the series on console, but the depth of gameplay and the online modes illustrate why most of us will never go back to the arcades. Soul Calibur V is the kind of game Fighter fans will keep around until they get rid of their consoles.