Trapt: Difference between revisions

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* [[Malevolent Architecture]]: Pre-set traps are strewn all about the various locales. Someone even went through the trouble of booby-trapping Olaf's grave.
* [[Multiple Endings]]: And a few nonstandard ones as well.
* [[New Game Plus+]]
* [[Non -Linear Sequel]]: In Japan, it was released as a sequel to ''Kagero'', but it's closer to being a loose remake of ''Deception: Invitation to Darkness.''
* [[Oddly Named Sequel]]: ''Trapt'' is the worst offender, but if it wasn't for the [[Numbered Sequel|numbering]] in the first three, few people would know they were related at first glance. Of course, its original name ''Kagero 2'' makes about as much sense, making it the sequel to ''Kagero: Deception II''. ''Deception III'' is apparently something else.
* [[Played for Laughs]]: Some of the traps cause comedic effects, such as a vase falling on someone's head, or a rotating floor that throws off their balance.
* [[Rasputinian Death]]: Perhaps the ''third'' point of the series: Funny combos to maximize
* [[Repeat Cut]]: Brief instant replays of the moment a trap connects with an invader; they can be switched on or off.
* [[Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies]]: A common destructive trap.
* [[Sealed Evil in A Can]]: The point of the castle you start playing in. Number of people surprised by this revelation? Low.
* [[Suicidal Overconfidence]]: Seriously, peasant? A club? You have reason to believe I'm the Devil Incarnate and you brought a club to my lair? Granted, a heavily damaged opponent will sometimes try to escape. There is nothing as disappointing as watching one of them leave.
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[[Category:Play Station 2]]
[[Category:Trapt]]
[[Category:Trope]]