One interesting aspect of
Tekken 5 is the inclusion of a third-person adventure game called
Tekken: Devil Within, which puts you in the shoes of Jin Kazama, infiltrating the Mishima compound. The story is not necessarily riveting, but the gameplay is fun. I found my wife and I both wound up playing this for over an hour on our (respective) first time to play the game. Part of the draw is the novelty, but it’s fun. It gets repetitious at times, but its only real drawback is the apparent inability to save your progress.
When you get past that, you have the regular Tekken modes, including Story Battle, Arcade, Time Attack, Vs. (Two-player mode), Team Battle, Survival, and Practice modes.
But wait, that’s not all! If you order now, you also get the entire classic Tekken collection as well in the Arcade History Mode! Call Now. Operators are standing by... I mean, well... Included with Tekken 5, you get the classic Arcade Collection (on the same disc), containing Tekken, Tekken 2, and Tekken 3. These seem to be nearly straight ports from the arcade. Not only can you play the game, there’s a test mode you can go into and you can run many of the tests that the arcade unit had, such as the polygon test, the controller test, etc. Only the tests that really wouldn’t make sense are disabled, such as the coin slot test. (Your PS2 really shouldn’t have a coin slot on it anyway.) Additionally, the Arcade History mode includes Starblade, the 3D sci-fi shoot-em-up game that is featured during the initial loading of Tekken 5.
Now, you’re going to want to set up a character profile for yourself pretty early on. That way you can start earning “fight money” toward buying costume upgrades and accessories for your characters early. These can cost quite a bit. I suggest having some friends over and everyone taking turns (on the same profile) in the Arcade mode, racking up as many points as possible so that you can unlock some cool costumes and accessories. This isn’t the kind of feature that makes or breaks a game, but it’s a fun extra.