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Dragon-ball-xenoverse-2-v1-10 Review

In the flickering neon glow of Conton City, the year is 852, but for a Time Patroller, "when" is a fluid concept.

The didn’t just bring new masters; it brought a shift in the fabric of reality itself. You stand before the Hero Colosseum , a pocket dimension where figures of legends—Goku, Jiren, and Frieza—are reduced to tactical digital spirits. To the citizens, it’s a game. To you, it’s a chilling reminder that in the grand tapestry of the Time Nest, even the mightiest gods can be codified, replicated, and commanded. dragon-ball-xenoverse-2-v1-10

The air feels heavier as you approach the rift. Here, the story of Xenoverse 2 stops being a straight line and becomes a jagged mirror. With the mysterious teenager Fu lurking in the shadows, his blade crackling with chaotic energy, you aren’t just fixing the past anymore—you’re experimenting with it. In the flickering neon glow of Conton City,

You remember the choice: Do you uphold the sanctity of the timeline as Trunks demands, or do you follow Fu’s smirk into a world where Vados and Champa interfere with the history of the Saiyans? Every "Correction" feels less like justice and more like pruning a garden that wants to grow wild. As you unlock the transformation, the power is intoxicating, yet it marks you. You are no longer just a defender; you are a force of nature capable of rewriting the stars. To the citizens, it’s a game

Should we explore the you made during Fu's experiments, or do you want to dive into the lore implications of the Hero Colosseum?

But as the sun sets over the Time Nest, the silence is the deepest part of the story. You possess the power of the gods, yet you are a ghost in every timeline you visit—a hero who saves everyone, but can never truly belong to the world they protect.