Gamers Universe writes: "Although the Devil May Cry series has long been associated with the PlayStation brand and Microsoft was seen to be managing something of a coup by bringing the fourth title in the series to the Xbox 360, Capcom has in fact been dabbling with the Redmond monolith for some time with conversions released on the PC. But while these were often rather lazy ports, packing blurry graphics and weak optimisations for the higher resolutions that PC gaming provides, Devil May Cry 4 was designed from the ground up for HD gaming thanks to the current console generation and so Capcom was provided with a far stronger opportunity to create something that did a modern gaming machine justice.
Long time series hero Dante is back to help lay waste to another demon invasion triggered by the greed of men, but for this battle he'll be making sure to leave plenty of the fight to newcomer Nero who has every intention of saving the world and his girl despite the pesky demon infected arm he also has to contend with. From over the top boss battles to ridiculous dialogue, everything is in place for fans of that slightly quirky Japanese narrative style."
Pros:
+High quality visuals
+Solid gameplay
+Amusing story
+Diverse move selection options
Cons:
-Repetitive boss battles
-Level backtracking
-Not all difficulties unlocked from the star
VGChartz's Mark Nielsen: "Upon finally finishing Devil May Cry 5 recently - after it spent several years on my “I’ll play that soon” list - I considered giving it a fittingly-named Late Look article. However, considering that this was indeed the final piece I was missing in the DMC puzzle, I decided to instead take this opportunity to take a look back at the entirety of this genre-defining series and rank the entries. What also made this a particularly tempting notion was that while most high-profile series have developed fairly evenly over time, with a few bumps on the road, the history of Devil May Cry has, at least in my eyes, been an absolute roller coaster, with everything from total disasters to action game gold."
3,1,4,5 to me, never played 2. 5 gameplay is amazing but level design was really disappointing to me, just a bunch of plain arenas, the story felt like a worse written rehash of the 3rd and the charater models looked weird ( specially the ladies ). Another problem with 5 was that there was not enough content for 3 charaters so I could never really familiarize with any of them
2.
Dmc.
4.
5.
1.
3.
God DMC2 was an awful game.
And in case this isn't obvious it goes worst to best
Order changes depending on your focus. I tend to focus on gameplay/fun factor, so...
5, 3, 1, 4, 2.
I really didn't like 4 but commend Dante's weapon diversity. The retreading of old ground was pretty unacceptable to me.
But even then... Still more enjoyable than 2 for me
Two Devil May Cry games have been delisted on Steam. As shared on X, formerly Twitter, by Wario64, Devil May Cry 3 Special Edition and Devil May Cry 4 are no longer available to purchase.
Bless the adorably all digital future! When it comes to PC games its not as big of an issue because there should always be another way to access single player games, but still, I hate to see anything get delisted.
Well, DMC4 special edition has a lot of issues to run from Steam.
I have to get a modded executable to even be able to run the game on Windows 10.
Not sure if it is because the game runs in DirectX10 or what, but it sucks they have not even tried to fix it.
Devil May Cry 4 launched 15 years ago today, bringing with it new character Nero. Has it stood the test of time?
Never liked it and I think I got it day 1.
Cheap Capcom design of half a game that you have to walk through twice.
5 isn't much different in that department. Encounter the same boss three times with three different characters? Endless warehouses or alien-like tunnels that all look the same.