featured-image

When I lay down to dream, I see Miu Miu tops from FW99, dresses that look like orchids from Blumarine SS13, and Monster Hunter Wilds armor sets I'm wildly jealous of as a devoted FromSoftware fan. I thought my years assembling avant-garde looks as a passionate Fashion Souls craftswoman were worth something – but Monster Hunter Wilds' Fashion Hunters have brought my life's work to shame.OK, let me take a deep breath.

I'm destroying my mascara.Am I being unfair to FromSoftware? Possibly. After all, I'm still proud of the faded bonnet and default schoolboy shorts I once put my Bloodborne protagonist in – very Thom Browne.



And Fia's smoky, chiffon Deathbed Dress in Elden Ring – it has an elegant Elie Saab swish to it. But am I being dramatic about the disparity between clothing options in Monster Hunter Wilds and the undoubtedly more masculine selection found in FromSoftware games? No. Absolutely not.

I've grown tired of hiding my mage's tasteful four-pack abs behind breast plates the same size as God's foot.So, Monster Hunter Wilds has impressive beasts to battle and a philosophical story to wrestle with, as we commend it for in our Monster Hunter Wilds review. But, as an outsider to Capcom's action RPG series, all I'm interested in is the game's slinky black capes and crop tops – the clingy fishnet tights and fancy helms.

I'm getting emotional already.Layered armor, an editing mechanic first introduced in 2018's Monster Hunter World, allows players to combine these runw.

Back to Entertainment Page