Invector: Rhythm Galaxy Review (MCgamer)
AVICII INVECTOR 2
The world's greatest rhythm game gets an all new entry with the same recognizable game-play (alongside some nice quality of life improvements and more polish), though this one has a comparatively worse track-list when compared to its predecessor. As someone who spent MANY hours on AVICII, beating it multiple times on multiple systems, I'd long since wanted more songs and this game more than scratched that itch. Having the options to change the worlds in the free-play mode was also a nice treat alongside most of the tracks being unlocked immediately with certain ones locked behind the campaign (Which I got bored of instantly and skipped all cut-scenes, though this is about the music, not the story).
Teaming up with a single music label was likely a necessary evil given the licensing nightmare most rhythm games are required to go through, but it feels more like Warner picked the track-list than the devs given some odd choices of songs but I also am not one for most mainstream and am likely not the target, despite the increase in difficulty to cater to veterans of the aforementioned AVICII INVECTOR. Speaking of which, with all the enhancements of this version, I'd greatly appreciate an enhanced version of AVICII INVECTOR.
If you played the original and REALLY want more like I did, it's definitely worth snagging on a sale (perhaps with the DLC bundle to have a bit more to do) but I'd otherwise just recommend the original if you haven't played either.