I know what you’re all thinking, “She’s a girl, so of course she needs to play a game like this on easiest possible difficulty.” Think what you want, but accessing Pretty Princess grants you an Achievement and turns Vampire Smile from something scary into a hilarious experience. This is a special difficulty level that can only be unlocked once you die numerous times in the story. What interested me the most, however, was the easiest of all easy modes, Pretty Princess.
Pretty+Princess+mode+is+like+this,+but+with+more+pink,+hearts+and+rainbows. These include various objectives like building up your combos so that enemies slow down around you, Matrix style. Once you’re finished killing everything in and everyone in the story, you can team up (or solo) for arcade levels. No matter though, as her craziness grants her powers akin to the Dishwasher’s dish magic.
On Yuki’s journey to exact revenge upon the world for throwing her in the slammer, she discovers that she’s a little bit nutty. If you don’t want to bust out of prison alone, the sequel allows for a buddy to hop in as Yuki’s brother both for local and online cooperative play. The campaign of Vampire Smile stars the Dishwasher’s sister, Yuki, who is attempting to escape after being wrongfully imprisoned. Most of these attributes remain in the sequel, The Dishwasher: Vampire Smile, but you’ll find it slightly easier on Normal and there are some new features. Buckets of blood would fly from your enemies as you used various weapons against them. When indie title The Dishwasher was released in 2009, the side-scrolling hack ‘n slash was notorious for its difficulty level and dark visual style.