The player is able to fly around the open-world hell. They can also summon demon allies to flight alongside them.[6] The game's weapons are inspired by the seven deadly sins (e.g. the Gluttony Gun that shoots cake batter on enemies for other people to consume).[6]
Saints Row: Gat out of Hell
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The Third Street Saints hold a birthday party for lieutenant Kinzie Kensington (Natalie Lander) on their spaceship, but while playing a game of Ouija with a board that once belonged to Aleister Crowley, they unwittingly contact Satan (Travis Willingham), who proclaims that the Boss (Troy Baker, Kenn Michael, Robin Atkin Downes, Laura Bailey, Diane Michelle, Sumalee Montano, or Nolan North) will marry his daughter Jezebel (Kate Reinders). Satan then drags the Boss down to Hell, and Johnny Gat (Daniel Dae Kim) and Kinzie volunteer to rescue them.[7]
Also of note is New Hades. Its biggest plus is that it's not Steelport, virtual or otherwise. There are similarities, most likely due to sharing an engine with Saints Row IV, but even though it resembles a heavy-metal cover version of the city, it's nonetheless a new place to explore. Great! Only, there isn't much new to do in it. Aside from a few notable exceptions, much of the activities, weapons and super powers are lifted across from the previous game. Your enemies even drop health pick-ups, which makes less sense in hell than it does in Saints Row IV's computer simulation.
There isn't a whole lot of depth to Gat out of Hell, so anyone looking for a fuller Saints Row experience more akin to Volition's past couple of efforts will be disappointed. In fact, I was able to finish the game in about roughly six hours. With that said, there's a certain satisfaction to be had when it comes to raising hell in the underworld. While character customization is gone, Johnny Gat has been something of a mythological figure in Saints Row lore and Volition makes his first playable appearance a grand one.
Volition knows exactly what the Saints Row series is. It's dumb, enjoyable fun that's not to be taken too seriously. Gat out of Hell certainly fits that criteria and though it's a smaller package this time around, it's still nice to take a short weekend trip to hell. Just don't expect to stay very long.
The premise is as wacky as anything we've come to expect from the Saints. While fooling around with an Ouija board on Kinzie's birthday, a portal opens and The Boss is sucked into hell by the Devil, and is supposed to be wed to his daughter, Jezebel. Johnny Gat and Kinzie volunteer to dive in after her and deal with Satan, and the two are playable characters for the duration of the game.
Similarly, it's weird that the game has Kinzie down in hell at all as an alternate playable character. I'm guessing they took a vote around the office and landed on Gat and Kinzie as the two fan-favorite characters to star in the DLC (not to mention choosing Gat for the titular pun potential alone), but Kinzie is treated like an afterthought. The plot of the DLC and most of the cutscenes it contains are focused on Johnny. You can play as Kinzie, but you share your entire arsenal of weapons and powers, and there are no specific quests for her. She essentially exists as a skin for Johnny, as strange as that sounds.
Past the strange character choices, there's one bit of information that's been floating around about Gat Out of Hell that isn't true; it's not a musical. That impression was given during a promo trailer which featured a musical number, but in truth, all that footage was taken from a solitary cutscene. There are maybe, five total cutscenes in the game, and only one of them has any singing, which is disappointing, as the concept of a Saints Row musical set in hell was pretty funny. But alas, it's just one brief moment.
So what's different in hell? It's a smaller cityscape, but more or less a miniaturized version of what we see in Saints Row 4. Conceptually, the DLC reminds me quite a bit of Assassin's Creed IV: Freedom Cry, where the game exists as a self-contained ecosystem, a smaller version of the original game.
An Open World from Hell - Wage war against the Prince of Darkness throughout the 5 unique districts of hell - rescue allies, pick a fight with nightmarish Arch-Dukes, rob Satan's soul processing plants; dozens of options await in an all new cityOutrageous Weapons - Put the 7 deadly sins to good use with an arsenal of underworld themed arms: fire exploding frogs at enemies, shoot swarms of locusts, and even deal destruction from afterlife's most comfortable (and lethal) armchairKill Dex - We promise you can do it this time. Pinky swearNew Supernatural Powers - The acclaimed super powers of Saints Row 4 are back with a hellish twist - Soar through the air on fallen angels' wings, summon devilish imps to attack your foes, and surround yourself in an aura that forces all to worship you
In Saints Row: Gat out of Hell, the leader of the Saints is pulled down to hell and, playing as Johnny Gat or Kinzie Kensington, your job is to head down there after him and prevent his soul from being given away. The open world style of Saints Row IV returns, albeit with zombie-like pedestrians, rivers of lava, and enemies that look like something out of Tenacious D video. The superhero powers return too, meaning that while you can steal any car that you can see, the ability to do that quickly becomes useless as you can traverse the game world faster on foot. Alternatively, you can super-jump into the air and sprout some less-than-heavenly wings in order to fly your way around the place.
The last time we got to play through Saints Row, we saved the world from terrorists and became president of the United States, only to have to defend Earth from aliens. From here we were placed in a computer simulation and given a number of super powers to take down an evil alien overlord. Now, in Saints Row: Gat Out of Hell, our personal protagonist and president gets dragged into hell after a game with a spirit board (think Ouija board) goes wrong, leaving his friends Johnny Gat and Kinzie to save him. 2ff7e9595c
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