Compare Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4: Road to Boruto (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Bandai Namco. Published by BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment. Released on 2/3/2017. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Genres: Action, Single Player, Multiplayer, Side View, Fighting, Adventure.

The final chapter of CyberConnect2's Storm run, Road to Boruto is a story-driven DLC that passes the torch to Naruto's son. Requires the base game, built for franchise fans, and does not pretend otherwise.

Road to Boruto is a DLC expansion for Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4 and it is upfront about exactly what it is: more of the same anime fighter, with a new cast and a new story pulled from the Boruto: Naruto the Movie film. The core combat is the same fast, arena-based brawler from the base game. You are working a simplified input scheme - mash your primary attack, manage chakra, use ninjutsu and secret techniques, sub in assist characters, and trigger QTEs during boss encounters. There is also a wall-run system that lets fights spill onto vertical surfaces, which keeps the spectacle going. None of this is new if you already own Storm 4, and that is the honest thing to say up front: the combat loop is unchanged. What the expansion adds is a new adventure mode set in the Hidden Leaf Village, a story that runs roughly three to four hours for the main beats, around ten side quests (fetch runs, sudden battles, an actual Chunin Exam section), and six new roster additions for offline and online Free Battle Mode. The new characters are the real hook. Boruto ships with two distinct fighting styles - his standard move set and a tech-device-based variant that changes how he plays offensively. Sarada and Mitsuki both bring creative ninjutsu setups that critics found more inventive than Boruto himself. Seventh Hokage Naruto and Wandering Shinobi Sasuke are adult-era versions of the franchise leads, and seeing their powered-up movesets in the context of the Momoshiki boss fight is the kind of fan-service moment the Storm series does well. Mecha-Naruto rounds out the additions as the weird wildcard pick. The roster lands on an already crowded 100-plus character base, so if you were hoping for deep integration of the new fighters into the online meta, the dilution is real. Story-wise, the DLC covers Boruto's arc from bratty kid to someone you actually want to root for, tracking his strained relationship with a Naruto who is now too busy being Hokage to show up to his own son's birthday. The emotional beats around that father-son dynamic land. The Tailed Beast tag team of Naruto and Sasuke versus Momoshiki is the obvious peak, and the game earns it. The weaker parts are the sections the movie itself glossed over - side content involving other characters that was cut for time feels thin, and one major boss sequence that looked incredible on paper turned into a slog because the available moveset was stripped down too far. The adventure mode side quests lean fetch-quest-heavy and drag when the main campaign momentum stalls. The expansion scored a 77 on Metacritic for the Xbox One version, which is a reasonable reflection of the community split: franchise fans found it a satisfying send-off to the Storm series, while others called it short and light on mechanical innovation. Both camps are right. If the base game's combat felt stale to you already, Road to Boruto will not fix that. The visuals are still genuinely impressive for an anime fighter, the cutscene quality is a step up from earlier arcs, and the new areas of the Hidden Leaf look good. Online Free Battle mode gets the new characters added to the pool, which is the only multiplayer consideration worth noting here - this is not a comp-focused DLC. Fred, Scout Team

Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4: Road to Boruto (DLC)
ActionSingle PlayerMultiplayerSide ViewFightingAdventure

Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4: Road to Boruto (DLC)

Feb 3, 2017Bandai NamcoBANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
GamerScout Says

The final chapter of CyberConnect2's Storm run, Road to Boruto is a story-driven DLC that passes the torch to Naruto's son. Requires the base game, built for franchise fans, and does not pretend otherwise.

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About Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4: Road to Boruto (DLC)

Road to Boruto is a DLC expansion for Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4 and it is upfront about exactly what it is: more of the same anime fighter, with a new cast and a new story pulled from the Boruto: Naruto the Movie film. The core combat is the same fast, arena-based brawler from the base game. You are working a simplified input scheme - mash your primary attack, manage chakra, use ninjutsu and secret techniques, sub in assist characters, and trigger QTEs during boss encounters. There is also a wall-run system that lets fights spill onto vertical surfaces, which keeps the spectacle going. None of this is new if you already own Storm 4, and that is the honest thing to say up front: the combat loop is unchanged. What the expansion adds is a new adventure mode set in the Hidden Leaf Village, a story that runs roughly three to four hours for the main beats, around ten side quests (fetch runs, sudden battles, an actual Chunin Exam section), and six new roster additions for offline and online Free Battle Mode. The new characters are the real hook. Boruto ships with two distinct fighting styles - his standard move set and a tech-device-based variant that changes how he plays offensively. Sarada and Mitsuki both bring creative ninjutsu setups that critics found more inventive than Boruto himself. Seventh Hokage Naruto and Wandering Shinobi Sasuke are adult-era versions of the franchise leads, and seeing their powered-up movesets in the context of the Momoshiki boss fight is the kind of fan-service moment the Storm series does well. Mecha-Naruto rounds out the additions as the weird wildcard pick. The roster lands on an already crowded 100-plus character base, so if you were hoping for deep integration of the new fighters into the online meta, the dilution is real. Story-wise, the DLC covers Boruto's arc from bratty kid to someone you actually want to root for, tracking his strained relationship with a Naruto who is now too busy being Hokage to show up to his own son's birthday. The emotional beats around that father-son dynamic land. The Tailed Beast tag team of Naruto and Sasuke versus Momoshiki is the obvious peak, and the game earns it. The weaker parts are the sections the movie itself glossed over - side content involving other characters that was cut for time feels thin, and one major boss sequence that looked incredible on paper turned into a slog because the available moveset was stripped down too far. The adventure mode side quests lean fetch-quest-heavy and drag when the main campaign momentum stalls. The expansion scored a 77 on Metacritic for the Xbox One version, which is a reasonable reflection of the community split: franchise fans found it a satisfying send-off to the Storm series, while others called it short and light on mechanical innovation. Both camps are right. If the base game's combat felt stale to you already, Road to Boruto will not fix that. The visuals are still genuinely impressive for an anime fighter, the cutscene quality is a step up from earlier arcs, and the new areas of the Hidden Leaf look good. Online Free Battle mode gets the new characters added to the pool, which is the only multiplayer consideration worth noting here - this is not a comp-focused DLC. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

xboxAnime FighterStory DLCAdventure ModeNew Generation CharactersQTE Boss FightsWall-Run CombatFree Battle ModeFan ServiceShort Campaign

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Game Info

Developer
Bandai Namco
Publisher
BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
Release Date
Feb 3, 2017

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