13.12.11 / Sony PSP, Square-Enix, Strategy RPG, Video game / Author: Kina / Comments: (5)
Tags: review, tactics ogre let us cling together
Ah, I love a good SRPG. Heck, I even love a bad one, but Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together is definitely one of the good ones. It can cling to me any day!
Beyond “it’s good,” though, there’s not much to say about it. It doesn’t do anything too different from other games in the genre, and it looks, feels and plays a lot like the original Final Fantasy Tactics. So it’s fun, but not particularly world-changing. And that’s just fine with me.
I’ve played for 14 hours, a few battles into Chapter 3. It is really easy so for, but then again I thought FFT was easy too, until I met Wiegraf and he… he… *snf* N-no, it’s okay. I’m over that now. It…it’s all in the past.
So maybe the real battles are yet to come, and maybe TOLUCT has some funky special battle mechanics I haven’t explored yet because I haven’t been forced to. Otherwise the only really “new” thing about it is that you can learn magic by using scrolls in battle. And that when enemies die and drop loot, other enemies can take them instead. I used to try and scurry ahead and grab them for myself, but now it doesn’t matter. I’m going to kill them anyway, they might as well have one last moment of pleasure.
I’m used to doing sick amounts of damage with mages, so I’m a little bummed at how useless they are here. Archers are easily the most useful class in this game, as was also the case in Jeanne d’Arc, Stella Deus and Path of Radiance to name a few, so it must be an SRPG thing. I’ve got three of them, Canopus, Sara and Asha, and I never leave home without them. In fact, my other units just get in the way, because most of the time they don’t even get to see any action.
Battle starts, C S and A smack everything within reach while heading for higher ground, supported by the rest of the troops. If I already occupy higher ground, I just wait for the enemies to come in range and smack them to the ground. Once they get a hit or two in, they’re able to fire critical hits with a skill called Tremendous Shot, which usually OHKOs enemy wizards, clerics and bowmen and does serious damage to everything except monsters. I hate monsters. I went into a random battle in the woods with nothing but dragons in it, and I just turned around and backed away slooowly.
Random battles are where the real challenge is at, seriously. In the story, most battles can be ended early by vanquishing your objective. If your Victory Condition is “Vanquish Wynoa”, you can end the battle in a turn or two by marching straight up to her and shooting her in the face. On the (very) few occasions that I have dutifully obliged them, I seem (?) to have gotten the same EXP I would have earned otherwise, so this is probably the “ideal” way to play the game. In fact the game is keeping a running tally of all the people I’ve killed and where they came from, so my Kill Everything approach might just come bite me in the gluteus maximus one of these days. Heh, bring it on.
So in short, fighting is so straightforward I haven’t had to bring out my full power yet. There’s things like Recruitment where you can get enemies to join your side, and a “Chariot” system where you can rewind turns (basically cheating. No true SRPG fan would ever touch such a thing), but when the game is this simple, what’s the point?
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining at all. I like a good easy game, and if a game comes pre-broken like TOLUCT does, all the better. It’s just that it makes all other features of the game next to useless because you don’t need them to survive. Storyline-wise my resistance is allegedly at a major disadvantage, but you’d never know it by the way I crush my enemies and ravish their womenfolk.
Come to think of it, maybe the game is that easy because Square-Enix wants you to focus on the story instead. Well, if that’s the case then that’s too bad, because the story is the part I’m enjoying the least. First off, I don’t like intricate political intrigue storylines to begin with. The game starts out with so many different terms and factions it just makes my head swim. There’s these kids, and these knights torch their village, so instead of getting revenge on those knights, they start fighting this other kingdom, and at some point they even toady up to the same village-toasting baddies, and then to get back at the other kingdom who didn’t burn their village, they burn another village and…Huh?
Secondly, I don’t like the language. It’s a little too “I spent a lot of money on this English major dammit, and I’m going to prove it!” It does a good job of setting the mood, if the mood you’re looking for is Washed Up Shakespearan Actor. Thirdly, and this is really petty, I don’t like the uppercase font they use. All-Caps flies in the face of every readability guide known to man. In short, the story’s hard to follow, hard to understand and hard to read. It’s only now in Chapter 3 that I’m kiiiiiinda getting an idea of who all the different factions represent and who belongs to what, where, why. Kiiiiinda.
Worse than the story, though, is the main character. He hasn’t made a single real decision in the whole game. He’s always just going along with someone else’s plan, whether it’s Vyce’s or the Duke’s or Leonar’s, he doesn’t have a single original idea. Then to make things even more pathetic, he manages to convince himself and tries to convince others that he thinks it’s a good idea and it’s what he would have done anyway, even though he knows, and we know, that whatever it is is a stupid plan. He’s like the middle manager that gets all his ideas from the higher ups then tries to pass them off as his own. Dude we know you’re just a lackey, so do us a favor cut the BS.
… All right fine, you got me. That’s not what I’m really mad about at all. A little self-delusion never hurt anyone, anyway. And I’m sure the rest of the game will be about him growing a pair and learning to take charge of his own destiny. No, what’s really getting my goat is that I haven’t been allowed to actually carry out any of those tremendously bad ideas myself.
For example, I choose a massacre at the end of Chapter 1 just for shits and giggles. Imagine my shock when I was denied the chance to slaughter civilians myself and instead forced watch it in a cutscene. And then I got blamed for it anyway! All the pain and none of the enjoyment, WTF? Again there was an assassination plot in Chapter 2 and again I had to watch, even though I was itching to do it myself. Tch. “There is Blood on my Hands” my bottom, this is a scam! I long for a character like Serdic in Rondo of Swords Path B, who can do the nasty deed himself and then go on to say, “Yeah I killed her, so what?” Massive props. Too bad they softened him up after a bit, I was loving that Cold Emperor gimmick.
Aaaaaannyyyywaaaaaaay. The game isn’t over yet. Still plenty of time to commit more atrocities and make more bad decisions. I hear there are 3 different routes in this game, so depending on how things go, I might play the game again and take the road not taken. Good game so far, though.
25.07.11 / Action RPG, Nintendo DS, Square-Enix, Video game / Author: Kina / Comments: (0)
Tags: the world ends with you
I’m a casual RPG gamer. I can’t deal with all this mindless dashing about, running all over the screen with one hand, using pins to slash and stab enemies with the other hand, controlling your partner on the top screen with your third hand, reaching for a rope to hang yourself with your fourth hand…
1. I don’t like Action RPGs. And this has an exceptionally hectic and confusing battle system. I just poked and slashed at random until something died, which worked for Days 1 and 2 but would have caught up to me eventually.
2. Every mission seemingly consists of “Erase the Noise.” Wanna walk through the park? Erase the Noise. Wanna scratch your nose? Erase the Noise. Wanna take a shit? Erase the Noise.
3. Amnesia protagonist. Seriously. He doesn’t help his case by being an unpleasant little twerp.
4. Characters I don’t care about. “We’re trapped in Shibuya and we have to fight to get out!” Yeah, uhh, good luck with that.
5. Story I don’t care about. Reapers, Noise, battles, sulky teenagers… what part of this am I supposed to give a damn about? The game is all “funky” and “cool”, I get that, I just don’t get the “likeable” and “relatable” part.
6. I spoke to the friend who recommended the game so strongly and it turns out…he hasn’t finished it either! And what he liked about it the most was not the story or the gameplay, but…the SOUNDTRACK. As a matter of fact TWEWY been on his “Keep meaning to finish” list for almost 3 years, he can’t even remember where he got to, and yet he keeps pushing it on other people. Why am I friends with him again?
Phew, that’s a weight off my chest. I was on the verge of repeating my Saigo no Yakusoku no Monogatari mistake, where I kept plugging away at a game that was making me suffer, even as other games were waiting to be played. Not saying it’s a bad game – for the right kind of gamer – but it’s definitely not for me.
So, that’s a third item struck off my Half-year resolution list. Unfortunately I probably won’t be able to play Summon Night 3 this year because my PS2 is, uhh, indisposed. I need to have it fixed, but things are, uhh, complicated so I can’t do that for a while. As for last two items on that list, Nora to Toki no Koubou is out! I’m struggling with whether to buy it or just pirate it, which is why I haven’t said anything so far. I’ll wait and see a couple of reviews first. I started Persona on the PSP the other day. Whew, old school is OLD. But not bad, I guess.
I’ve also been testing various other games and gotten pretty far in some of them, but that’s all stuff for another post, another day.
23.04.11 / Japanese, Nintendo DS, RPG, Square-Enix, Video game / Author: Kina / Comments: (0)
Tags: review, saga 2, saga 3, time travel
1. It starts off really slowly. The first third or so of the game was really boring. It was all about finding parts for the time-traveling ship. Go here, do this, go there, do that. Zzzz… I literally fell asleep behind the DS more than once. Things pick up a bit once you go to the past and visit a few places, but it’s still a bit of a snoozefest. Saga 3 only really got off the ground right when I went to the South Tower to kick Ashera’s behind, then topped it off with Chaos’s carcass before proceeding to the future. It was all smooth sailing from there.
2. Sidequests are a pain. The majority of them require a certain number of Time Gear points in order to unlock certain solutions. If, for example, you want to go back in time and fight a certain boss, you might need anything between 1 and 4 Time Gear points to unlock that option. Time Gear points can only be accumulated by fighting battles, so you may very well have to walk away and fight a little before coming back to finish the quest. Some quests also require time travel, sometimes more than once. At least one of them also disappears without warning when you pass a certain point in the game. All this suffering would be somewhat bearable if the quest rewards were worth it but sadly they almost never were. Easily acquirable items or paltry sums of money? Thanks for nothing.
3. I missed the true ending because of three stupid sidequests. I’ve ranted enough about this. I won’t go over it again. Unlocking the True Ending doesn’t just depend on those sidequests, though. You also have to pick the “right” answers in certain sidequests in order to raise the friendship points of your party to a certain level. However, these answers aren’t always intuitive. Sometimes doing the sensible, logical thing is the wrong choice and you were supposed to pick the stupid option instead. To worsen things, you can’t even see those points you’re accumulating, so you won’t even know that you’ve failed until you finish the game and get…nothing. *sigh*
4. Traveling back and forth through time gets old. I did it a lot because I was trying to do sidequests. Massive pain in the buttocks. Never again. Next time I’ll… wait, there won’t be a next time. Forget it.
5. The game is a little too easy on Normal. If you know what you’re doing (which stats grow best with which class, which weapon raises which stat, etc), you can break the game pretty quickly with judicious raising of your stats, which rise much more readily than they did in Saga 2.
What’s worse than that, though, is that you can recharge your weapons. In Saga 2 (or think Fire Emblem, which has a similar mechanic), when your weapons ran out of uses, that was it. You couldn’t whack away with your best swords and expect to have plenty left over for the final boss. In Saga 3, it’s no problem at all. Recharging weapons just costs a bit of money and can be done at any inn. I had 500,000G cash by the end of the game so you can tell the costs didn’t hold me back at all.
Status effects were a joke as well. They almost never hit, and when they did they didn’t hurt much. I was poisoned occasionally and cursed a few times and that was it. Around the 25 hour mark, I managed to mass-produce an item that blocked all stat effects, which sealed the deal for good. And as if all that wasn’t enough, the game also threw several powerful guest party members my way. Or more like they would be powerful if I ever used them for more than healing. Can’t have the enemies dying too quickly, can we?
6. Bosses are pushovers. They were so wimpy, in fact, that I had to hit them with my weakest weapons and attacks so they could stay alive longer for more stats-leveling. The only one who made me sweat briefly was Ashera, and even he went down pretty quickly. Wusses.
7. There are a lot of useless gameplay features. Passwords, for example. You’re taught to enter passwords at the beginning, but you will almost never have to. Passwords you find will be automatically entered and the useless item you get will be delivered to you in your ship. Battle Drives were “awesome but impractical,” to borrow a term. To their credit, they would be useful in battle if a) everyone you fight wasn’t a wuss and b) Time Gear points weren’t so precious. Those points take time to accumulate and I used them frequently so wasting a whole node of them on some walking-dead boss was out of the question. Thus Battle Drives went into the unused bag as well.
8. Your airship (Stethros) was useless in battle, especially considering the amount of game-time I devoted to beefing it up. In theory, you could scout monsters to strengthen your airship’s laser attack. Well, I scouted a ton just to get them off the screen and found out it takes tons and tons of them to make even a slight difference to your weaksauce laser. And you know what? You don’t want to make it strong, because then it’ll kill the enemies too fast and you don’t gain any skill levels or stat levels from using it. On some of the later battles, I used the “strengthening” beam to buff my party, but as far as I can tell it didn’t make a lick of difference. Waste of time. Nice ship, though.
9. Transforming into mecha and monsters was worthless. Mecha are weak against magic and can’t gain any stats. Unless you intend to keep that character as a mecha for the rest of the game, you’ll be hurting yourself. Monsters are too limited in what they can do. Getting a useful monster transformation in the first place is luck of the draw. Then you can’t use magic that isn’t yours innately, you can’t wear armor and you can’t use weapons. When you switch forms, you can’t carry over attacks, whereas if you stay a cyborg/human/esper/beast, you get to keep and use attacks you’ve learned. The special attacks are even unlocked on weapons you haven’t used yet, as long as you have learned them. It’s a no-brainer, really.
10. I liked being able to skip battle animations, but having to reenter commands every round was a pain. An auto-battle feature would have been great. I also didn’t like that running away from battle would leave you standing right by the enemy, ready for it to attack you again. Gimme some space, man.
11. The time travel plot didn’t make any sense at the end. After Dune and his friends save the world in the future, they leave the future and go back 15 years to live there. Doesn’t that mean, first, that they’ll change Dior and Nemesis’s futures and personalities just by growing up with them? Second, that in 15 years time there’ll be two of them in New Dam village when the originals who were originally from the future but came back to the present and then later went into the future catch up with the ones who beat the boss then came back to the present to live and have naturally grown into the future? (It makes sense in context…I think)
Thirdly, are they then going to sit back and let the rest of the resistance handle everything just because “It’s up to our childhood selves to handle it?” Does this mean that even as I play this game, future-present-grownup Dune, Milfy, Polnareff and Shiryu are chilling on a beach somewhere sipping piña coladas because they already know I’m going to succeed? If not, what happened to them? Finally, where did Jupiter (Dune’s dad) come from? He’s not in Dam village in the present, but the present is only 15 years from the future where he’s a married adult, so he can’t not have been born then. I went to every town/village on the planet in the past and present and never ran into him. Speaking of which, where’s Boraju as well? Few time travel plots resolve issues like this, but that doesn’t mean I’m going to give Saga 3 a free pass for it.
So there were a couple of things I didn’t enjoy. It was a long journey from start to finish, and I don’t think I have it in me to replay it any time soon. But I had a fine time while it lasted, flaws notwithstanding. Not that it’s ever going to come out in North America, but if you ever learn Japanese (you should, anyway), give it a shot. Now back to Arabians Lost, which is finally starting to pick up.
20.04.11 / Japanese, Nintendo DS, RPG, Square-Enix, Video game / Author: Kina / Comments: (0)
Tags: review, saga 2, saga 3, shadow or light, time travel
Yay! Finished! I ran roughshod over Laguna last night. I was half-asleep doing it, actually, because the fight was such a snoozefest. He only had three forms, and none of his attacks were ever enough to kill me. Not to mention I had a guest party member who would cure my life to full at the end of every turn and I made good use of him. Whenever the boss summoned extra troops, I had everyone use the ridiculously-overpowered Flare to wipe the field clean in one turn. The only challenge was staying awake long enough to kill him, seriously.
The ending was okay. Everyone’s alive, including your dad you’d never met. Well actually he wasn’t, but they somehow brought him back to life by turning him into a cyborg. Square-Enix, biology doesn’t work that way!!! As for that guest party member who I would have fought in the true ending to discover all kinds of truths, he disappears without a trace and presumably gets away with whatever evil scheme he was planning. And I never got to find out who Wanderer was or what he wanted either. Grr, I’m still mad.
Apart from the lack of difficulty and my loss of the true ending though, I had a great time with Saga 3. It would take hours to write down everything that was so great about it, but I will at least put down the main points I appreciated, particularly in comparison to Saga 2. In the interest of fairness I’ll eventually write another post about what wasn’t so great, but for now I’m just going to feel good about this. Those 33 hours of my life weren’t for nothing!
First things first, the characters were great. Saga 2 had a main character and a bunch of no-personality self-created party members. This game has Dune, Shiryu, Polnareff and Milfy, each with their little quirks and character traits. Dune is just Dune, a little dense, a little silly, a little stubborn sometimes, but generally a cheerful, likable guy. As far as RPG protagonists go, he’s exactly my type. Shiryu is his girlfriend/childhood friend. Sweet, strong romantic streak, always wants to help other people, awful cook, not annoying at all. I like her. And I like how she’s in a romantic relationship with Dune but the issue is rarely referred to and is never allowed to take over the game. They didn’t even have the obligatory “Your girlfriend is in trouble, throw everything away to save her!” scene (Nemesis and Dior did, but they’re idiots and don’t count). Polnareff is your brash, cocky violent friend who acts first and thinks later. I love Polnareff. And Milfy, dear Milfy. Rough, cranky, take-no-prisoners girl who teases and argues with Shiryu non-stop. Where Shiryu is the nurturing, mothering type, Milfy is the type to give you a swift kick in the pants when you start moping too much. They make a great combo.
I loved my party. I wish they’d have even more interaction, just so I could get to see them bicker more. They gave off a genuine “childhood friends” feel by not going too far in one direction or another. By that I mean they didn’t argue all the time, but at the same time they didn’t slavishly agree with everything Dune said either. He may have been the main character, but he was more like a primus inter pares than like the typical Messianic hero you tend to get in jRPGs. There was nothing special about him at all, and his friends certainly didn’t treat him that way. Awesome.
Most of my 33 hours were spent playing and fighting, not interacting, so it’s just as well that the gameplay was fun too. They kept introducing new features and new gameplay elements right until very late in the game. You start with a normal battle system, then you get a Time Gear that lets you stock points in battle. This unlocks the Past, Present and Future battle drive options in battle. You also get different upgrades to your ship that let you, for example, dig up buried treasure, or see all the treasures on the map, or see where all the enemies are (very useful), you get the ability to “scout” enemies and add them to your ship’s laser, etc. There was always some new feature cropping up, which kept the gameplay fresh. Saga 2 was like this as well, but I appreciated it more in Saga 3, probably because my mind wasn’t consumed with trying to stay alive.

You can also spark abilities on the fly and use them the very next turn!
The real-time level up system was cool as well. In Saga 2, and presumably in Saga 1, your stats leveled up randomly at the end of a battle. In Saga 3 it happens right as you’re fighting. Which stats level up and the probability of leveling up depends on your class (human, esper, beast, monster), the weapon you’re using and the difficulty of the battle. You’re way more likely to level up against a boss than against some random weakling, and it happens on the spot. You hit the boss with your sword at 45 strength and *ping* now you have 46 strength. In longer boss battles you can level each stat three or four times and take advantage of them right away! No more of that “Gee, this extra HP would’ve been really helpful if you’d given it to me before the battle” nonsense. This is the way!
It’s possible that I was just used to the way Saga games work now, but this time I found it much, much easier to level up my stats. The game seemed way more generous with the level ups and I didn’t have to grind each weapon to death just to get a few bonuses. Armor and protective equipment was more powerful as well, sparing me the pain of wasting turns using shields in order to level up my defence. DF was around the 85 point at the end without me ever gaining a single point in it. HP also grew much faster, even for Espers. My Esper Polnareff had 974 HP going into the final boss battle, which is really high for Espers. Plus unlike Saga 2, your HP isn’t capped around 1024, so my beast Dune and beast Shiryu had around 1540 HP (they made a sweet furry couple at the end) while my human Milfy had about 1225 HP. All this made the game far easier and far less frustrating.
Also I liked the way the enemies went easier on me this time. Maybe it’s my imagination, but it was much easier to run away from them. Perhaps it’s because the map controls were easier to navigate, or I’d just gotten used to the 3D environment. Later on in the game I got the ability to freeze time. I could stop enemies in their tracks and then “scout” them, or avoid them, or even whip around and attack them from behind! Speaking of which, I almost never got back-attacked even when I deserved it, as opposed to Saga 2 where every other attack was a back attack.

Saga 2 could be nightmarish
The number of attacking enemies was also far more reasonable, at most six or seven on the field at once. In fact, that many was rare, it was usually four or five. Even in chain attacks, only one enemy team would show up at a time. The rest would wait patiently in a stack for their turn. How considerate. Especially since I still get horrible flashbacks about being attacked by over thirty enemies (30!!) at once in Saga 2. Thirty enemies in front, around and behind my team! And their speed was so much faster that they’d all go first before I could get a hit in, it was murder! I’m so happy my speed growths were better this time (beast + physical skill = crazy speed lvl up) and the enemies were much fewer so the playing field was a lot more level.
Let’s see, what else. Oh, I liked the optional overworld. You can choose to explore the overworld map, or you can skip it entirely and go straight to your destination. Not always, but in many cases, just by following the Yellow Dotted Line. It’s like there’s an over-overworld and a regular overworld, depending on how fast you want to get somewhere and how many battles you want to face. It’s not like Radiant Historia where you have to pass through the same Lazvil Hills and the same Granorg Plain every time you want to go somewhere, or Saga 2 where just stepping out of your village is asking for trouble. I still chose to explore every place at least once so I could pick up chests and dig up treasure. The point is, most of the time it’s optional.
Oh, you know how you can eat meat in the Saga games to turn into a monster? Your characters stay transformed even in town. Even during cutscenes and storyline events, they’re still monsters and nobody on the planet has a problem with it. They can even tell at first glance that the ghost floating over there is Dune, even if he looks like every other monster in the game. I just found that funny.

Tra la la! No battles for me!
While I’m on the topic, I liked being able to change my party members’ classes. A human could become an esper by eating meat/a gear of the opposite element, and vice versa. And any of them could shift from robot->cyborg->human/esper->beast->monster just by eating meat (moves you to the right of the scale) or a gear (moves you towards the left) that an enemy dropped. This helped tremendously in growths, which is probably why my characters ended up so terrifically strong by the end. And again, it helped keep the game and the battles fresh.
Let’s see, what else did I like… Flying around on my awesome ship was cool. Being able to skip battle animations to make battles go faster was cool. The music was decent. I liked the “action” theme they played every time something dramatic happened. And there were no soppy events, so there was no silly soppy music, it was all upbeat and inspiring. Good job!
Now then, so much for Saga 3. Next up I’ve almost finished the terrible Nanatsuiro Drops DS game, which doesn’t really deserve a writeup. I also started Remindelight, another horrible game, which I’m not going to continue. Tactical Guild has filled my bad game quota for the year. I also tried to start Arabians Lost, but I’m about three hours in and they haven’t stopped talking so my desire is wilting by the second. Luckily, just today I downloaded the free demo of Territoire, from EasyGameStation, the makers of Recettear, so I think that’s going to be my next game. So many games, so little time…