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  1. Wild Hearts
    2006 · Drama · 1h 28m

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  1. Wild Hearts. A recently widowed detective moves from Los Angeles to his family's mustang farm to care for his grieving daughter. this is a great movie for family to watch. Especially raising...

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  2. www.ign.com › articles › wild-hearts-reviewWild Hearts Review - IGN

    • Building adds a very fun twist to familiar a co-op monster hunting formula.
    • Wild Hearts - Gameplay and Screenshots
    • Have you played Monster Hunter and are you going to play Wild Hearts?
    • Verdict

    By Tom Marks

    Updated: Mar 5, 2023 8:28 am

    Posted: Feb 16, 2023 3:00 pm

    Do you dream of the chance to get dropkicked by a lava-monkey the size of a building? Of course you do, and goodness gracious is Wild Hearts excited to make that dream a reality. Omega Force and EA’s take on co-op monster hunting is a remarkably familiar one, spicing up enormous elemental animal fights across its gorgeous feudal Japanese locations with on-the-fly building mechanics. But even though its crystal-clear inspirations lead to unavoidable comparisons that aren’t always flattering for Wild Hearts, learning how to best take advantage of its karakuri contraptions both in and out of fights is always a lot of fun.

    Importantly, Wild Hearts plays this recognizable part very well, making it extremely easy to recommend to any current Monster Hunter fan hungry for new prey. Its combat recaptures that excellent mix of tactical and terrifying, pushing you to be thoughtful about your attacks and pick your moments carefully against foes many times your size, some of which can make your health bar disappear in the blink of an eye. Dodging is your best friend, and (depending on your choice of weapon) attacks often lock you into animations that make you a sitting duck until you finish them – although Wild Hearts follows in the footsteps of recent Monster Hunters by increasing your mobility quite a bit, even giving you a dedicated jump button. Combat is as much about learning the ins and outs of each monster, your weapon’s capabilities, and even the terrain around you as it is about actually executing the right button inputs.

    The karakuri building system is excellent.

    But because Wild Hearts is not actually a Monster Hunter game, it gets to unburden itself from certain mechanics that have started to feel a little dated as Monster Hunter World and Monster Hunter Rise continue to streamline and modernize that two-decade-old series. I didn’t miss things like weapon sharpening or cluttered inventory management, and the simplified nature of stat-boosting food and support items meant I always felt like I was spending more time out in the field and less on pre-hunt prep. At the same time, Wild Hearts does lose a little bit of the complexity I enjoy about Monster Hunter along with those clunkier parts – for example, you can’t choose to capture monsters, they don’t get tired or go to sleep, and their “rage mode” simply seems to trigger when they hit a certain damage threshold, which makes fights play out more similarly from hunt to hunt. But the ground-up approach Wild Hearts has taken does mean it’s simpler to pick up, making it easier for me to recommend to brand-new hunters than even Rise was.

    Played Monster Hunter, playing Wild Hearts too

    Played Monster Hunter but skipping Wild Hearts

    Haven't played Monster Hunter but am interested in Wild Hearts

    Haven't played Monster Hunter and don't care about Wild Hearts

    During those fights, your karakuri play the role of quick-use support items – though everything you place sticks around until it’s destroyed (either by you or a monster), so battlefields can often be strewn with the remnants of past encounters in a pretty neat way, especially when you join someone else online and see what they’ve been up to. You can summon simple blocks to jump off of or build walls, springs to launch you in any direction, or torches to give you a fast fire attack. It’s an interesting mechanic, but it really shines when you start unlocking fusion karakuri, which let you stack these basic objects in specific patterns to make special constructs like huge bombs or chain traps. You can only equip four of the six basic karakuri at a time, which gave me a real choice to make between the utility of an object itself versus what it could combine into, which ends up feeling like a mini combo system of its own to customize and master.

    There’s also an enormous unlock tree for the karakuri, complete with new objects to build and upgrades to existing ones. Many of those are extremely useful, from drying racks or fermenting jars that increase the stat-boosts of your food to a sick wooden wheel you can speed around maps in like a motorcycle. Others are entirely cosmetic, letting you place benches, signs, and decorations around the maps and hub town alike so you can doll it up a bit to impress online visitors. I didn’t come anywhere near completing this tree in the few dozen hours it took me to roll credits and reach Wild Hearts’ endgame, letting me prioritize upgrades for the karakuri I used most and leaving plenty more to chase.

    If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then Koei Tecmo’s Omega Force is using Wild Hearts to flirt hard with Capcom right now. But using a beloved game as the template for a new one isn’t necessarily a bad thing, and Wild Hearts manages to introduce plenty of fun new ideas to the Monster Hunter formula while recapturing it well enough to s...

  3. Feb 23, 2023 · Wild Hearts is the perfect entry point for anyone who has ever dreamed of being a Monster Hunter Liker. A bombastic, brilliant good time that’s held back by frequent, frustrating performance issues on PC.

    • Liam Richardson
    • Former Video Producer
  4. Wild Hearts from Hallmark is a Wonderful movie everyone will love. Bobby, played by Richard Thomas plays a cop and he moves him and his daughter Madison played by Hallee Hirsh, to a small town called Hope. Madison ends up having a special gift with a wolf and her babies and loves riding horses.

  5. Feb 16, 2023 · Wild Hearts is a worthy competitor to Monster Hunter, boasting brilliantly creative weapons and fearsome beasts to match, scuppered only by an infuriating camera.

  6. In WILD HEARTS CAN'T BE BROKEN, Sonora Webster (Gabrielle Anwar) runs away from her aunt's home in Great Depression-era Waycross, Georgia, before being sent into foster care, deciding she will be a "diving girl" in a traveling carnival.

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  8. Feb 17, 2023 · Wild Hearts – remind you of anything? (pic: EA) East meets West in a team-up between EA and the makers of Dynasty Warriors, which results in the best Monster Hunter game never made.

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