Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains never lets a great story get in the way of its clunky, repetitive action.

That’s a shame. Attack on Titan, a terrific story-driven manga and anime about humanity in crisis, sometimes lets story tangents drag on too long between its awe-inspiring action scenes. The franchise is a great candidate for a video game. Just not this one.

You can download Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains now for $40, exclusively for the Nintendo 3DS. Developed by Spike Chunsoft and published by Atlus, it’s the first game from the franchise available in the United States. Sadly, buying both seasons of the anime for about the same price would be a much better choice. I played it on a standard 3DS.

Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains

Above: Trust us: This guy hates you more than clothing.

Image Credit: Atlus

What you’ll like

A game that’s true to the show

Attack on Titan depicts the last stand of humanity against freaky and sometimes childlike giants. The remains of the race have gathered into a city protected by three huge walls and manage to repel the invaders, until a colossal Titan blows a hole in the outer wall big enough for the others to pour through.

The game begins there, picking up with Eren Jaeger, a boy whose mother died in a Titan attack. He volunteers for the Survey Corps, a group of soldiers that use gas-powered jets and grappling hooks to swing around the city, delivering fatal blows with katanas to the sensitive spots on the giants.

The game features five of the series’ main characters: Eren, his childhood friends Mikasa and Armin, Survey Corps badass Levi, and “potato girl” Sasha, a Corps member obsessed with food (aka the comic relief).

AoT: Humanity in Chains borrows heavily from the anime, and frankly these become the best parts. It adds absolutely nothing to the story, walking you through it via short, action-oriented missions. You play as one of five main characters from the anime in individual, overlapping quests.

Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains

Above: Team Levi all the way, baby.

Image Credit: Atlus

That score, those cutscenes

Humanity in Chains borrows other elements from the anime: The stunning operatic score weaves throughout the game, giving it a sound that is far better than it deserves. Cutscenes come directly from the anime with no additions, so they have great animation quality and add to the sense of drama.

Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains

Above: You evade a Titan’s attacks as Eren Jaeger during the tutorial. It may be the last time you see them coming.

Image Credit: Atlus

The first time you kill a Titan

An excellent tutorial teaches the extremely simple combat in AoT: Humanity in Chains. You use the same Omni-Directional Mobility gear shown in the anime: two hip-mounted gas jetpacks, a system of dynamic grappling hooks, and two razor-sharp swords. You zip along, Tarzan-style, on your grappling hooks, accelerating through the air using your jets to propel you.

When you see a Titan, it offers you target points to lock on. You pick one, hit a button to fire a hook and yank yourself toward it, then tap X twice to start a QTE: once to spawn a red donut-shaped targeting reticule, once to slash with your swords precisely when your circular cursor shrinks inside that donut to attempt a critical hit.

If you get a critical hit on an arm or a leg, you’ll lop it off. If you hit the Achilles tendon, you’ll take the Titan to its knees, exposing the sensitive spot on the back of its neck, where you can kill it. You can target your second shot, pull yourself toward it, aim and fire without even hitting the ground, even selecting the next Titan as the first one falls.

The first time you perfectly execute a kill, you feel pretty special. The 50th, not so much.

Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains

Above: Aberrations fly, hop, and generally try to kill you, unlike most Titans.

Image Credit: Atlus

What you won’t like

The giants move like brain-damaged turtles

Killing Titans grows simpler with every contest. My complete guide to all the strategy you will need:

Don’t attack from the front.

Given that Titans move — and notice your presence — extremely slowly, that’s all it takes to stay out of trouble. When not attacking, you can use your jet packs to stay out of the way where they can’t get at you. Aberration-type Titans are a bit more challenging, only because they sometimes actually seem to want to kill you, but the A.I. lumbers when it should dart.

That’s a good thing, because. …

Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains

Above: One of your teammates flies ineffectually at a Titan. Trust us, they’re not going to do any damage.

Image Credit: Atlus

Your comrades make them look like geniuses

Playing with teammates from the series is a fun concept, but in reality you’d be better off with a bag of slingshots. Mostly they run around aimlessly, getting into trouble, rarely giving you an assist. They’re best at rescuing you from the grip of a Titan, a duty they perform well if they’re in the neighborhood.

The rest of the time, they will serve at best as a distracting screen of people for Titans to swipe at instead of you.

Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains

Above: If only your camera stayed in this straightforward, over-the-shoulder angle.

Image Credit: Atlus

Titans and your teammates are both smarter than the camera

Attack on Titan: Humanity in Chains has what may be the worst camera I’ve ever experienced. That’s a terrible thing in a game that has you swinging in arcs with a jetpack. The camera by default follows you at a sort of side-view/45-degree angle, pointed at nothing in particular, and certainly nothing you’re looking at or trying to approach.