Monster Hunter Generations can be a tough game to love. It isn’t going to treat you nice–if you’re having trouble with a battle, no hint screen pops up pointing out the obvious tells you may have missed. The creatures have no large, glowing “hit me here” emblems like in most other action-adventure games.
You learn–sometimes through repetition, often through failure–how to deftly use your weapons. You have to watch your prey carefully, plan out an attack, and when the beast starts to limp, then you go in for the kill. When you fail, it’s almost always because you were too greedy, you rushed headlong into battle instead of being patient, biding your time. This is the flow that Monster Hunter Generations captures so perfectly, and which lies at the heart of why Monster H…