

The overall sound effects are okay-ish at best, and feel somewhat generic. While the voice lines by the commentators are nicely handled in a true old-school boxing announcement kind of way, the lines repeat way too quickly and soon become stale. The sound design of Destruction AllStars feels like a massive missed opportunity. You will have a few different color tones but no actual changes to the models, which is just ridiculous, especially if you have to buy these skins.
#DESTRUCTION ALLSTARS CONTROLS SKIN#
Sadly, these are all lazy recolors of the original skin and actually add nothing to the overall fun of collecting new skins. One thing is bothersome though, as the game has a lot of skins you can unlock for the 16 characters of the game. These last two aspects also influence the gameplay heavily. There is hardly any variety, and they all have the same hazards and feel too big and empty. The arenas, however, are bland and boring and all have the same neon-lit theme.

While not pushing the PlayStation 5’s hardware to its limits, the characters and cars all look quite spiffy and cool. The Challenges have a few tiny lines of text between characters, but that’s basically it. While every character comes with a little blurb describing who they are, there is no deep storyline to play through in Destruction AllStars. Now, Fornite-with-cars has finally been released for our entertainment, albeit under the name of Destruction AllStars.Īs this is the vehicular-combat equivalent of a Battle Royale game, there is, as expected, no real story content to be found. Sadly, it got delayed until February 2021 to properly finish the game and make sure it runs smoothly on the new hardware. Destruction AllStars was such a title to normally drive the PS5’s release forward. Let’s face it, while the next-gen consoles are quite impressive, they both lack exclusive titles to actually make them worth the purchase.
