The Shakedown: Hawaii “Shake-Up” update is now available

The Shakedown: Hawaii “Shake-Up” update is now available

Shakedown: Hawaii received a major update. The “Shake-Up” update, is available on PC, Nintendo Switch, Playstation 4, Playstation 3, and Playstation Vita.

The 3DS version will getting the update too, but it isn’t coming out just yet. Vblank Entertainment says that 3DS users should “stay tuned” for more info on that coming soon.

THE “SHAKE-UP” UPDATE!

This brand new update is a major one, adding a whole new difficulty mode, new types of shakedowns, a quick menu for upgrades, and much more. It also brings a long list of little tweaks and refinements that’ve gradually made their way into the game since the previous console update.

The newly added “Normal” difficulty setting is a top to bottom rebalancing of the game. The original experience remains available as the “Easy” difficulty setting (and will remain the setting for your previous save games). Since the original game was specifically designed to be on the easier end, it made more sense to label it this way, rather than calling the new mode “Hard”.

The new normal mode is designed to offer more challenge, but not to the degree of being experts-only.

Among the many other changes, the added difficulty mode boasts new and more challenging enemy types across its story missions, sidequests, and shakedowns. New bulletproof and even fireproof enemies will appear as the game progresses, necessitating the use of more varied attacks.

When they arrive, ordinary weapons will no longer do, and you’ll need to dodge, jump stomp, melee, or throw things to defeat them. Trying to take them out with a vehicle won’t always do the trick anymore either, as many will blast you out and force you to continue your battle on foot. There are also fewer health drops, which encourages a more strategic approach and steers you towards more exploration. You’ll need to start to pay more attention to where pick ups, shops, and vending machines are so you can replenish your health.

I’m incredibly happy with how the new difficulty setting’s turned out, especially as someone who’s played through the game more times than I can count. It breathes a whole new life into the experience and I definitely think it makes a second playthrough worthwhile.

The empire building metagame has been extensively rebalanced under the new difficulty setting. Properties are more widely affected by inflation, multipliers give a more balanced boost, and shakedowns give higher rewards to encourage a broader approach. The overall changes make acquiring the island feel much more rewarding, and give further room for varied strategies to calculate an optimal speedrun. The order in which you unlock and acquire properties, which types you collect first, which ones you apply multipliers to, and when you complete specific missions — it will all drastically affect how quickly (and cheaply) you can dominate the city.

New shakedowns have been added to add to replace some of the repeated scenarios. Many of the original scenarios have also been updated with additional layers of gameplay, combat or challenge when played through the new difficulty mode.

As for the Arcade Challenges, some have been tweaked and tuned, but they all remain a singular difficulty (unaffected by the difficulty setting). This ensures all leaderboard entries are on an even playing field.

About Shakedown: Hawaii

Shakedown: Hawaii follows three protagonists through a 16-bit open world. Build your own “legitimate” corporation by completing missions, acquiring businesses, sabotaging competitors, “re-zoning” land, and shaking down shops for protection money.

Explore the island by foot, by car, or by boat. It’s filled with arcade challenges, sidequests, stores to shop at, houses to burgle, civilians to interact with, and secrets to discover.

You begin your adventure as an aging CEO, struggling to make sense of the modern world. Online shopping killed his retail stores, ride sharing his taxi business, and streaming his video stores. To save the company, he’ll need to learn the “methods” of modern business, and use them to rebuild his empire.

The entire island is up for grabs… or at least, could be with the right business model.

It’s business in the front, and bodies in the back… in Shakedown: Hawaii.