As I mentioned in an earlier post, I was about to set Tales of Vesperia aside and move on to another game this weekend. At about 10 hours in I was finding both the game's combat system and story to be less than satisfying. I am now 18 hours in, so what happened? Two things changed on Sunday night, I broke down and read a FAQ on the combat system, and the story took off.
I generally do not like to read FAQ's as they feel like cheating, but I find in RPGs, especially JRPGs, that FAQs are often the only way to get a true explanation of how a game's systems work. This proved to be especially true with Tales of Vesperia. The game never really explains to you how combos work, and the tutorial sections are not especially helpful since there is no way to exit, change your character setup, and come back in to try it out. They also do not allow for enough repetition to truly understand what works. I understand that the Tales series is largely a niche within a niche, and that it has a core group of fans that it caters to, but it seems to assume you already know many of the core concepts of how the combat system works. It is especially odd to assume that a player has played a previous game in your JRPG series when you release it on Xbox only.
The FAQ cleared up a whole bunch of confusion about how the different types of Artes worked, how combos work, and that there was still a lot of capabilities to be unlocked in the combat system (you get the ability to chain together much larger combos as the game goes on). This last point is true to the extent that I know realize that this game has an almost FFXIII pace in unveiling its game systems. Anyway, combat is much more fun now and I am looking forward to the full system unlocking.
The story has also shifted from being a bunch of losers wandering aimlessly while looking for a rock to something more political. There is now intrigue involving the throne and the guilds. While it is still fairly silly anime stuff, it does have a bit more depth and edge to it. I do wonder why they waited until 12 hours in to get there though.
The game remains very linear, you basically just walk from town to town with little to no chance of getting sidetracked, I am hoping this opens up a bit as well.
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Sunday, May 24, 2015
Final Fantasy XII and Tales of Vesperia Update
The fun continues with Final Fantasy XII, I am really enjoying this game. I have just defeated the two living walls in The Tomb of Raithwall and I am pausing progression to deal with some hunts and to grind out some licenses. I am right about level 22 with most characters and the game has really come into its own. As you gain access to more Gambit options the system opens up and tuning your Gambits becomes another, non-power-related, chance to advance and customize your character. Working out strategies for your group, especially with six characters to play with, is a blast. The game really feels like a single player version of FFXI, and I mean that in the best possible way, combat has a cool teamwork feel to it. I am just plain enjoying playing the game, especially the combat system.
The Yensa Sandsea area is proving to be a good place to level and get LPs, so I am taking the time to progress my characters in the augmentation area of the license board. I already have all three mist charges with all characters, this dramatically changes the way you play, the extra MP means you can cast spells almost constantly in combat. This is enhanced further by many of the augmentations. The story is kind of just there, but the gameplay is excellent.
Things are not going as well with Tales of Vesperia, I am about 11 hours in and there is not a lot going on in this game. The characters are pretty standard, insipid, anime fair; Karol is especially annoying. The story is like a NES-era Dragon Quest game, you go to a town, grind until you can afford the weapons, solve that towns problem and walk to the next one. The cut scenes are particularly annoying, not only are they poorly written, you also have to hit "A" after every line of dialogue, even when there is voice acting.
The combat system, the Tales series claim to fame, is not really anything to write home about. Commentor Matteo mentioned that I needed to make some AI changes in order to keep the enemies from ganging up on me, and this worked very well. The problem is, there just isn't that much to the combat, I use the same combo over and over, no matter what the situation. I just do three hits and then a Wolf Strike, this seems to work for everything. Recently the game introduced the concepts of Fatal Strikes and Burst Arts, but so far neither has seen much use. Perhaps this game would be better if it had some kind of training mode where I could try out different combos on a dummy and experiment with the system a bit. Many fighting games have this sort of thing now, it can be hard to tell what is causing things to happen during fights. The screen gets crowded and the fights are over fast. Once I got the AI sorted out the game is no longer hard, so maybe I am doing the right thing. I am going to give it a few more hours tonight, but there isn't much holding me to this one. Do not be surprised if I pull the plug on Tales of Vesperia. I bought several Tales games a month or so ago during a PSN sale, I will at least try all of them.
The Yensa Sandsea area is proving to be a good place to level and get LPs, so I am taking the time to progress my characters in the augmentation area of the license board. I already have all three mist charges with all characters, this dramatically changes the way you play, the extra MP means you can cast spells almost constantly in combat. This is enhanced further by many of the augmentations. The story is kind of just there, but the gameplay is excellent.
Things are not going as well with Tales of Vesperia, I am about 11 hours in and there is not a lot going on in this game. The characters are pretty standard, insipid, anime fair; Karol is especially annoying. The story is like a NES-era Dragon Quest game, you go to a town, grind until you can afford the weapons, solve that towns problem and walk to the next one. The cut scenes are particularly annoying, not only are they poorly written, you also have to hit "A" after every line of dialogue, even when there is voice acting.
The combat system, the Tales series claim to fame, is not really anything to write home about. Commentor Matteo mentioned that I needed to make some AI changes in order to keep the enemies from ganging up on me, and this worked very well. The problem is, there just isn't that much to the combat, I use the same combo over and over, no matter what the situation. I just do three hits and then a Wolf Strike, this seems to work for everything. Recently the game introduced the concepts of Fatal Strikes and Burst Arts, but so far neither has seen much use. Perhaps this game would be better if it had some kind of training mode where I could try out different combos on a dummy and experiment with the system a bit. Many fighting games have this sort of thing now, it can be hard to tell what is causing things to happen during fights. The screen gets crowded and the fights are over fast. Once I got the AI sorted out the game is no longer hard, so maybe I am doing the right thing. I am going to give it a few more hours tonight, but there isn't much holding me to this one. Do not be surprised if I pull the plug on Tales of Vesperia. I bought several Tales games a month or so ago during a PSN sale, I will at least try all of them.
Final Fantasy X-2 Review
As I mentioned previously, I enjoyed Final Fantasy X quite a bit, sadly I found its sequel to be deeply flawed. I understand, and even applaud what Square was going for with FFX-2. They were aiming to make a more lighthearted, faster moving game, and in many ways they succeeded. Unfortunately, the effort is marred by extensive reuse of assets, a shallow story awkwardly divided into chapters, and a interesting, but flawed, combat system.
FFX-2's story picks up two years after the end of FFX and the apparent death of Tidus. Yuna and Rikku had a post pilgrimage career (job?) change and are now Sphere Hunters. They have been joined by Paine, a Lulu replacement. Sphere Hunters are basically adventurers who search the ruins of Spira for artifacts, many of which reveal secrets from the past. Meanwhile, Spira is undergoing an awkward time of change as the populace comes to terms with the events of FFX and the revelations about Yevon.
Yuna, Rikku and Lulu make up a Charlie's Angels like group called the Gullwings. They hunt spheres for fame, fortune and, in Yuna's case, clues to the location of the missing Tidus. Yuna and Rikku have had a drastic cosmetic makeover since the first game in order to fit in with the second game's more modern style. The Gullwings spend the first part of the game feuding with the Leblanc Syndicate, another group of Sphere Hunters, though they eventually join forces to fight the main evil in the game. The main plot revolves around the conflict between New Yevon and the Youth League, the two main power groups in the post-Calm world, over who will control Spira.
While the setup manages to be both lighthearted and politically intrigued, the story falls short in execution. This is largely a structural problem, the game is divided into chapters and once you move on to another chapter, many of the events in the previous chapters, like sidequests, are no longer available. This is a problem for three reasons, some important exposition is in these sidequests, the existence of the sidequests is not always obvious (some show up on the map, some do not), and it isn't always clear when you will trigger a chapter change. These problems have mechanical implications as well, sometimes proper advancement can be tough if you miss sidequests. These problems really undermine both the story and the mechanics of the game. I do not mind having some missable content in a game, especially when it makes sense from a story perspective, but most of this game is missable. Beyond the structural problems, the characterizations are not great, Yuna comes across as pretty shallow and goofy after being a much stronger character in the first game. Rikku is still Rikku. Paine is a bit more interesting, and is actually more connected to the overall plot than the others.
Another problem is the heavy reuse of assets from the first game. You will be travelling to places that you have been before and seeing monsters and people that you have seen before. While I understand the desire to reuse assets to control cost and time, it felt excessive in this game. It felt like most of the areas were repeats from FFX, and they hadn't done enough new with these areas to make them interesting again. Reuse of assets in a sequel like this is always a tough issue, so I don't want to beat up on it too much over this.
The final problem is the combat system, which is inspired, yet flawed. The combat system in FFX-2 is much more action-oriented that FFX's system, and features a job swapping, Dress Sphere System. Both of these additions are great ideas, I enjoyed the faster pace of combat, and loved swapping jobs on the fly to set up combination attacks. The execution, again, was lacking and it was ultimately frustration arising out of the combat system that caused me to walk away from the game. One of the first problems is the game's high random encounter rate. I know this was standard for the era, but this game came as we were moving out of that phase of JRPGs and it sticks out like a sore thumb next to the much more modern feeling battle system. For a more action-oriented game the costume changes (they are skippable) and some of the skills take way too long to execute. This can really break up the pace of the battle and often makes for a skill triggering after its need has been overcome by events. Related to that issue is the high occurrence of monsters with status effect powers, many of which are instant death or incapacitate. This leads to a lot of cheap game over screens. Finally, you can miss many of the jobs, either by not seeing a hidden chest or by not going on a side quest. Again, there is no real indication that this is going to happen, or that it has happened, adding to the frustration.
FFX-2 is not a bad game, I stayed with it almost until the end, and it has a lot of really good ideas in it. The combat system is a direct ancestor to FFXIII's system, which I loved, but wasn't quite up to the task. More new assets, or more clever reuse of existing assets would have been nice, but the game's biggest problem is its chapter structure. You can just miss too much of the game. I played this game this winter, immediately after FFX, maybe I would have like it more if there had been more time between them, or I had waited for the HD remake. It isn't a bad game, but you probably don't need to seek it out.
Friday, May 22, 2015
Weekly Update
It is really Investors & Illithids
I did not get to game at all this week due to a training conference at work, but I did get to read a really cool book called Designers and Dragons: '90-'99. This book covers the tabletop RPG industry during the '90s and is very interesting. The name of the book would lead you to believe that it focuses on the design side of gaming, but really it is centered on the business. The book does discuss certain game mechanics choices made by the companies covered, but spends most of its page count discussing the rise and fall of the different companies that contributed to RPGs in the '90s.
It is part of a series of 4 books, one book covers the '70s, one the '80s, one the '90s, and one the '00s. Each chapter covers one company, counter to what you might think the chapter covers the entire history of a company, not just its activities during the '90s. So there is no chapter discussing TSR, it is covered in the '70s when it started, although it does get covered in the Wizards of the Coast chapter for obvious reasons.
The author starts with a discussion of White Wolf, the makers of Vampire, this is a smart choice as that company defined the overall feel of '90s gaming, even if you never played one of their games. It covers the company from its founding, all the way through to the unfortunate events involving CCP. The book also spends a considerable amount of time on WoTC, the architects of the CCG boom, and the eventual owners of D&D.
While many of the business stories are well known to me, especially the story of how TSR was purchased, others are completely new. Many mysteries from my teen and early adult years are solved, like what happened to Traveller and why Guardians of Order just seemed to vanish. Many companies were also connected in interesting ways that I never realized until reading the book. It is a fascinating tale of buyouts and bankruptcies. I ordered the rest of the series immediately after finishing this book.
As this is a long weekend, and my family has nothing planned, I expect I will get a good amount of gaming done.
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Weekly Update
I am enjoying Tales of Vesperia so far, but I am having a bit of trouble adapting to the combat system. I usually control Yuri, and I am constantly getting swarmed. I can't seem to combo for more than about three swings in a row without getting jacked. While I do pretty well against regular enemies, basically through hit and run, the last boss I fought, some kind of winged dog thing, creamed me. It does seem like some elements of the combat system are still being introduced, I only have had Overlimits for an hour or so, so perhaps as more features unlock I will be able to do better. It is also possible that I just don't understand how it works.
I started up Star Ocean: Second Evolution on my PSP after abandoning Lunar, so far it is good, but it has some long cut scenes so it may not be all that conductive to playing on the train.
I have a few reviews in the works for games I have completed like FFX-2, FFXIII-2, Star Ocean, and Valiant Hearts. I will be pushing hard to complete Final Fantasy games over the summer as I have several that I have never completed and I would like to be up-to-date before FFXV drops. That line up currently looks like: FFIII, FFV, FFVIII, Crisis Core, FFXIII Lightning Returns, and Type 0 HD. Main series games will be the first priority, I am not sure that I can stomach FFIII, but I will give it a try. I am really tempted to play FFVII and FFIX again, I haven't played them since I beat them at release, and I really enjoyed both. Of course, this will hurt my backlog process.
Friday, May 15, 2015
Ni No Kuni Review
My history with the game
While there are no previous Ni No Kuni games for me to have a history with, Level 5 is one of my favorite developers. Dragon Quest 8 was my favorite RPG of the PS2 generation, I enjoyed its graphical style, voice acting, and expansive world riper for exploration. I also enjoyed Dark Cloud, and the portions of Dark Cloud 2 and Rogue Galaxy that I had time to play. I am aware that the White Knight Chronicles series received mediocre reviews, but I have not played them. In general, I have found that Level 5’s games have a great sense of character and personality due to their use of cell shading and the extra care paid to voice acting. I have also found that Level 5’s games offer very generous amounts of content both as part of the main quest and in end game activities.
Gameplay
I will start the discussion of Ni No Kuni’s gameplay elements with an admission, I have never played Pokemon or any of its imitators. I was slightly too old for the Pokemon explosion of the late ‘90s and I have never picked one up in the years since. As a result, this is my first “monster collecting” game. I have played a few games, like Dragon Quest 8, that featured some amount of monster collection as a side pursuit, but never one where the system was this robust or a central feature of the game.
I also want to get a discussion of the game’s AI out of the way, the AI is not great. Your party members do not always make great decisions during battles, they often deploy a familiar that does not make sense given the tactical situation, or choose to battle without a familiar when they are “squishy” and in melee range. While I cannot think of any fights that I lost solely due to the bad AI, it did cause resource management issues. The AI burns through Magic Points at a staggering rate, mostly due to all the extra self-healing it has to do. In fact, I spent most boss battles dispensing potions and heals rather than directly attacking the boss. So while enemy AI is not Mickey Mousecapades bad, it will cause some frustrations.
The gameplay is a cross between Dragon Quest, Pokemon, and a more active game like Star Ocean. The game follows the traditional Dragon Quest path of having the hero go to a town, solve the inhabitants’ problems, and move on to the next town. The interesting twist of collecting monsters, called familiars, and raising them is added to the Dragon Quest formula. The player collects monsters by defeating them in battles, occasionally a defeated monster will not die, but instead will gaze at your party in adoration for a while. During this phase you can serenade the love-struck beastie and convince it to become your familiar. Once a familiar has joined your party you can raise its level by adding it to your active party and give it additional stat boosts by feeding it, and eventually can change its form by feeding it magical drops. These familiars will be doing most of the fighting.
The fighting system is superficially like a traditional Dragon Quest or Final Fantasy game. The enemies line up on one side of the field and your party on another, you select actions for your character from a menu list. The combat system is actually very different from traditional games, it is far more actin oriented and has more in common with Final Fantasy XIII or Star Ocean than Dragon Quest. The action takes place in real time, although it does pause for some action selections, and you only directly control one character at a time.
You swap out your familiars to take advantage of their different skills, you can only use each familiar for a limited amount of time before swapping it out. Some of your familiars are better at physical combat, some at defense, and others excel at attack or healing magic. You can see an example of a fight in the YouTube video below.
You will collect a lot of these familiars throughout the game, possibly in the hundreds. Each character can only have three active familiars at any one time, you can also have three more familiars tagging along to be swapped in to your line up between fights.
The fighting remains challenging and interesting throughout the game. My only real issue with the combat system were the teammate AI problems that caused resources to get used at an alarming rate. Restoration items are fairly expensive for much of the game, so this is not a trivial problem.
The game also includes a robust crafting system. I feel like I only scratched the surface of it in my play through, mostly only making restoration items. I did find it to be less opaque than these sorts of systems tend to be in console RPGs. The in game wizard's book contains many recipes and guidance on how the system works. I can see myself messing around with this more in the post game content.
There is a whole familiar arena battle that I did not even touch during my play through, I will comment on it if I go through the post game content.
Sound
The voice acting is wonderful, it is not quire up to the standards set by Dragon Quest VIII, but it is very close. There are no annoying JRPG cliche characters with squeaky voices. The soundtrack is fantastic, I would rank it ahead of the Dragon Quest VIII soundtrack. Joe Hisaishi of Studio Ghibli composed most of the soundtrack, and while it is fully orchestrated, it is video game music. I mean that in the best possible sense, it has charming repeating loops that you can easily listen to, and enjoy, for the 50 to 60 hours it will take to complete the game. I place this soundtrack on par with Final Fantasy XI, one of my all time favorite game soundtracks.
Graphics
The graphics are gorgeous, Level 5 and Studio Ghibli have taken the formula that worked for Level 5 on Dragon Quest VIII and injected it full of personality and charm. The game really does look like an animated feature, I feel like they have achieved what the Tales series has been attempting for years. All of the characters are memorable and instantly recognizable, the took cartoon logic and ran with it, allowing for a wide variety of characters. This is important due to the large number of familiars. There is some pallet swapping for the monsters, and some monsters that just get features added to form a new monster, but there is not an excessive amount of this. The monster families give an in game reason for this to happen anyway. The environments are excellent and draw you in to the world. My three-year-old watched me play the game as though it was a movie.
Story
I want to avoid any spoilers, so I will keep this short. Oliver, a young boy in a world much like our own, and his friend build a homemade car and take it for a test drive. During their test drive there is a horrible accident and Oliver's mom dies saving him from drowning. Oliver learns, from a stuffed toy named Mr. Drippy, that his mother has a soul mate in another world and that his mother could be saved by saving her soul mate. Oliver and Mr. Drippy travel to this other world to defeat the evil menace, Shadar, and save his mother. Throughout the game Oliver, Mr. Drippy, and their companions travel from town to town. In each town they help the people overcome local problems and, in turn, are helped with their larger quest. The themes of teamwork and mutual benefit are deeply woven into the game.
Oliver discovers that he is a wizard and has the ability to cast spells and command familiars. He also discovers that he has the ability to borrow virtues like courage or love from people who are strong in them, and bolster those who are weak. This is used to strengthen the themes of community and compassion in the story more than it is used as a puzzle element.
The story is charming, well told, and bittersweet. Level 5 has done a lot more with the Dragon Quest formula, and this still very much follows the Dragon Quest formula, than I have seen a developer do before. The writers did a good job calling back to characters in towns you left behind, and give you reason to return. The interaction between the party members is believable and entertaining.
Verdict
If pressed to decide my favorite game of the PS3/360 generation I would say the Mass Effect trilogy. But, if I was forced to choose a single, stand-alone game, this is it. This is my favorite RPG since Dragon Quest VIII, it delivered everything I was looking for when I bought it.
I will start the discussion of Ni No Kuni’s gameplay elements with an admission, I have never played Pokemon or any of its imitators. I was slightly too old for the Pokemon explosion of the late ‘90s and I have never picked one up in the years since. As a result, this is my first “monster collecting” game. I have played a few games, like Dragon Quest 8, that featured some amount of monster collection as a side pursuit, but never one where the system was this robust or a central feature of the game.
I also want to get a discussion of the game’s AI out of the way, the AI is not great. Your party members do not always make great decisions during battles, they often deploy a familiar that does not make sense given the tactical situation, or choose to battle without a familiar when they are “squishy” and in melee range. While I cannot think of any fights that I lost solely due to the bad AI, it did cause resource management issues. The AI burns through Magic Points at a staggering rate, mostly due to all the extra self-healing it has to do. In fact, I spent most boss battles dispensing potions and heals rather than directly attacking the boss. So while enemy AI is not Mickey Mousecapades bad, it will cause some frustrations.
The gameplay is a cross between Dragon Quest, Pokemon, and a more active game like Star Ocean. The game follows the traditional Dragon Quest path of having the hero go to a town, solve the inhabitants’ problems, and move on to the next town. The interesting twist of collecting monsters, called familiars, and raising them is added to the Dragon Quest formula. The player collects monsters by defeating them in battles, occasionally a defeated monster will not die, but instead will gaze at your party in adoration for a while. During this phase you can serenade the love-struck beastie and convince it to become your familiar. Once a familiar has joined your party you can raise its level by adding it to your active party and give it additional stat boosts by feeding it, and eventually can change its form by feeding it magical drops. These familiars will be doing most of the fighting.
The fighting system is superficially like a traditional Dragon Quest or Final Fantasy game. The enemies line up on one side of the field and your party on another, you select actions for your character from a menu list. The combat system is actually very different from traditional games, it is far more actin oriented and has more in common with Final Fantasy XIII or Star Ocean than Dragon Quest. The action takes place in real time, although it does pause for some action selections, and you only directly control one character at a time.
You swap out your familiars to take advantage of their different skills, you can only use each familiar for a limited amount of time before swapping it out. Some of your familiars are better at physical combat, some at defense, and others excel at attack or healing magic. You can see an example of a fight in the YouTube video below.
You will collect a lot of these familiars throughout the game, possibly in the hundreds. Each character can only have three active familiars at any one time, you can also have three more familiars tagging along to be swapped in to your line up between fights.
The fighting remains challenging and interesting throughout the game. My only real issue with the combat system were the teammate AI problems that caused resources to get used at an alarming rate. Restoration items are fairly expensive for much of the game, so this is not a trivial problem.
The game also includes a robust crafting system. I feel like I only scratched the surface of it in my play through, mostly only making restoration items. I did find it to be less opaque than these sorts of systems tend to be in console RPGs. The in game wizard's book contains many recipes and guidance on how the system works. I can see myself messing around with this more in the post game content.
There is a whole familiar arena battle that I did not even touch during my play through, I will comment on it if I go through the post game content.
Sound
The voice acting is wonderful, it is not quire up to the standards set by Dragon Quest VIII, but it is very close. There are no annoying JRPG cliche characters with squeaky voices. The soundtrack is fantastic, I would rank it ahead of the Dragon Quest VIII soundtrack. Joe Hisaishi of Studio Ghibli composed most of the soundtrack, and while it is fully orchestrated, it is video game music. I mean that in the best possible sense, it has charming repeating loops that you can easily listen to, and enjoy, for the 50 to 60 hours it will take to complete the game. I place this soundtrack on par with Final Fantasy XI, one of my all time favorite game soundtracks.
Graphics
The graphics are gorgeous, Level 5 and Studio Ghibli have taken the formula that worked for Level 5 on Dragon Quest VIII and injected it full of personality and charm. The game really does look like an animated feature, I feel like they have achieved what the Tales series has been attempting for years. All of the characters are memorable and instantly recognizable, the took cartoon logic and ran with it, allowing for a wide variety of characters. This is important due to the large number of familiars. There is some pallet swapping for the monsters, and some monsters that just get features added to form a new monster, but there is not an excessive amount of this. The monster families give an in game reason for this to happen anyway. The environments are excellent and draw you in to the world. My three-year-old watched me play the game as though it was a movie.
Story
I want to avoid any spoilers, so I will keep this short. Oliver, a young boy in a world much like our own, and his friend build a homemade car and take it for a test drive. During their test drive there is a horrible accident and Oliver's mom dies saving him from drowning. Oliver learns, from a stuffed toy named Mr. Drippy, that his mother has a soul mate in another world and that his mother could be saved by saving her soul mate. Oliver and Mr. Drippy travel to this other world to defeat the evil menace, Shadar, and save his mother. Throughout the game Oliver, Mr. Drippy, and their companions travel from town to town. In each town they help the people overcome local problems and, in turn, are helped with their larger quest. The themes of teamwork and mutual benefit are deeply woven into the game.
Oliver discovers that he is a wizard and has the ability to cast spells and command familiars. He also discovers that he has the ability to borrow virtues like courage or love from people who are strong in them, and bolster those who are weak. This is used to strengthen the themes of community and compassion in the story more than it is used as a puzzle element.
The story is charming, well told, and bittersweet. Level 5 has done a lot more with the Dragon Quest formula, and this still very much follows the Dragon Quest formula, than I have seen a developer do before. The writers did a good job calling back to characters in towns you left behind, and give you reason to return. The interaction between the party members is believable and entertaining.
Verdict
If pressed to decide my favorite game of the PS3/360 generation I would say the Mass Effect trilogy. But, if I was forced to choose a single, stand-alone game, this is it. This is my favorite RPG since Dragon Quest VIII, it delivered everything I was looking for when I bought it.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Farewell Lunar
They haven't experienced the load times yet.
Last night I decided to give up on Lunar: Silver Song Harmony for the PSP, it just wasn't that good. The load times, unavoidable battles, and endless backtracking wore me down to the point that I did not want to play anymore. The straw that broke the camel's back was my attempt to catch a pink bug in Iluk, I basically had to walk through every screen twice, since the enemies re-spawn when you leave the screen, this is incredibly annoying. I just finished dealing with this during my three pointless trips through the Meryod Woods. Here is my short review.
My History With the Game: I first encountered Lunar when I got it for my PS1 years ago. It came in a beautiful package with a hardcover hint book and was billed as one of the top games people who did not have a Sega CD had missed. I only played a few hours of it before something else drew me away. My little brother did beat it and loved it. I picked up a copy for the PSP cheap on Amazon a few years ago. That is the version that I played for this review.
Lunar has a long history of being re-released. It was originally released in 1992 for the Sega CD, saw a re-release for the Sega Saturn in 1996, another for the Sony Playstation in 1999, there was a Gameboy Advance version in 2002, and finally this PSP version in 2009.
Gameplay: There is not a lot going on here. There wasn't even all that much going by the standards of the late '90s when it was released for the PS1. Even examining the game in light of its original 1992 release date reveals a very traditional RPG. The main features that would have set it apart from other early '90s RPGs are the use of CD-ROM, the ability to avoid fights on the field, and the fact that characters move around on the battlefield. One of these features does not effect gameplay, and the other two are junk.
Even on the PSP the only features in the game that require the use of crazy, multimedia, CD-ROM technology are real voices, enhanced music, and animated cut scenes. Everything else is straight out of the standard cartridge JRPG handbook.
You can theoretically avoid battles in this game by dodging enemies in the dungeons. Unlike other games of the period there are no random battles, you can see enemies while you are walking around and try to avoid them. I say "try" because in practice it is very difficult. You are generally in very narrow corridors and the enemies move fast; this is compounded by the fact that when you come out of a fight other enemies in the area rush you and you wind up right back in a fight again. There is a painful loading delay before the battle starts, the enemies re-spawn when you leave the screen, each screen is small, and you backtrack... a lot.
Once you are in a battle, your party and the monsters line up on opposite sides of the screen for turn based combat. The difference between Lunar and its contemporaries is that the characters and monsters do not stay in these lines and run all around the battlefield. This could add an interesting tactical element into the battles, but they left that on the table during implementation. The game does not signal you in any way as to what order actions will occur in, this means that you are constantly wasting AOE attacks when the enemy moves right before you cast. The game also does not allow you to choose which enemy you attack if your target dies, this means your character will often waste their attack running across the screen. Finally, position is never really exploited. You line up your melee characters in front of your casters, but the enemies just run right past them, suffering no ill effects, to attack your mages. Character movement does not add an interesting tactical element, it just makes battles longer (something the game does not need). It does not make the battles harder, just longer. The way the game handles character movement does not add depth, just chaos. Adding movement without control is the gameplay equivalent of hiring Jeffster to play your wedding.
No enemies are in range of this AOE.
Ultimately these gameplay shortcomings, that might be otherwise be excusable in a game of this vintage, combine with the absurd amount of loading in this version to ruin the game.
Story: There isn't much to say here that you couldn't guess by looking at the cover art and title font. Alex is a young man in a farming village who dreams of a life of adventure. Luna is the young woman who grew up with him, she is like his sister, but they are starting to feel something more. Alex sets off on a journey to become a Dragonmaster. Luna gets kidnapped. He meets a sassy tomboy, a lecherous barbarian, a stuck up mage and a wallflower. The dragons are tied to the elements. Blah, blah, blah. The story didn't bother me, it is exactly what I expect from a game of this era, although I found most of the characters more annoying than the norm, it just needed to be stronger to make up for the gameplay shortcomings.
Graphics: I don't have a lot to say about these either. They have been improved for the PSP version, the sprites are a little bigger and more detailed, but there is nothing special here. It is pretty much your basic PSP upscale of a 16-bit RPG.
Sound: The soundtrack is quite good, I actually listened to the CD that came with the game for years. I suggest you listen to it:
Verdict: Skip it. There is not much here, and even that is ruined by the load times.
Monday, May 11, 2015
Weekend Gaming
This weekend was fairly productive from a gaming
standpoint. On Friday, I finished Final Fantasy XIII-2. While not a great game,
I certainly enjoyed it more than Final Fantasy XIII. I wonder if I would have
appreciated this game more if I had not played it right after Ni No Kuni. Maybe
too much monster collecting in a row?
I also made a good amount of headway in Lunar while travelling to Pennsylvania. I made it through Damon's Spire and joined the thieves’ guild in Reza, I think my encounter with the Red Dragon is drawing closer. Lunar may be the first game that I bail on before completion. It is a very linear game, and it has an unforgiveable amount of loading on the PSP. It loads only a small portion of any town or dungeon, and there are several seconds of loading between each screen. There is also a lot of loading before and after battles. While the game gives the illusion that you can avoid battles, in reality it is very different to avoid the enemies in the small spaces it loads, and the enemies respawn every time you leave a screen and come back. It is taking me far longer to complete this game than it should because of the loading, it also makes it difficult to get anything done on the train, and kills my PSP battery life. Perhaps if I had played this game years ago and had some nostalgia for it, I might be inclined to continue.
I also managed to play Final Fantasy XII for a few hours on Sunday, I broke into the palace, got caught making my way out through the sewers, and escaped prison through some old tunnels. I am currently back in the starting wilderness killing some creatures that were too difficult earlier.My first few hours with Tales of Vesperia were positive, I am enjoying both the art style and the combat system. I also appreciate the fact that the hero is neither a young farm boy nor a brooding amnesiac.
I also made a good amount of headway in Lunar while travelling to Pennsylvania. I made it through Damon's Spire and joined the thieves’ guild in Reza, I think my encounter with the Red Dragon is drawing closer. Lunar may be the first game that I bail on before completion. It is a very linear game, and it has an unforgiveable amount of loading on the PSP. It loads only a small portion of any town or dungeon, and there are several seconds of loading between each screen. There is also a lot of loading before and after battles. While the game gives the illusion that you can avoid battles, in reality it is very different to avoid the enemies in the small spaces it loads, and the enemies respawn every time you leave a screen and come back. It is taking me far longer to complete this game than it should because of the loading, it also makes it difficult to get anything done on the train, and kills my PSP battery life. Perhaps if I had played this game years ago and had some nostalgia for it, I might be inclined to continue.
I also managed to play Final Fantasy XII for a few hours on Sunday, I broke into the palace, got caught making my way out through the sewers, and escaped prison through some old tunnels. I am currently back in the starting wilderness killing some creatures that were too difficult earlier.My first few hours with Tales of Vesperia were positive, I am enjoying both the art style and the combat system. I also appreciate the fact that the hero is neither a young farm boy nor a brooding amnesiac.
Friday, May 8, 2015
A Quick Word on Blog Structure
The first several reviews of games will be for games that I have completed since the end of last year, I have been making progress on my backlog for a few months already. Some of these will be informal discussions like the Final Fantasy X post, others will be short discussions like the Dragon Quest 1 post, and others will be longer reviews like my upcoming post on Ni No Kuni. Since most of the games I will be playing are RPGs, I will not be able to complete and review several games a week. There will also be post discussing my progress through, and thoughts about, the games I am currently working on.
The games I am working on are over on the right. You will notice that I list a Living Room game, a Bedroom game, and a Mobile/Portable game. This is because my ability to play games in the living room is limited by the viewing habits of my wife and daughter, so I usually have another game going in my bedroom for when I just cannot stand another episode of a cooking reality show (my cooking reality show tolerance is zero episodes). I ride the train to work, and I work on portable games then.
You will also see a list of upcoming games on the right. This list is games that I have already completed, or decided to stop playing, that will have reviews in the near future.
You may occaisionally see general gaming related topics, but they will usually be tied to a game I am currently playing. This is not a gaming news site.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Dragon Quest 1
On top of working through my console backlog, I have started working through some mobile games. I now spend 40 minutes a day on the NOVA metro, this gives me plenty of time to work on mobile games. They are also something I can do while sitting through repeated viewings of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood with my daughter.
I recently completed Dragon Quest I for the iPhone. I played through this game several times on the NES, and once on my Gameboy, but it has been years since the last time I picked it up. Overall the iPhone version has a lot of great improvements. You gain XP and gold faster, there is a quick save function, there is a context sensitive action button, and it feels like the walking speed has been increased. I think some of these improvements were in the Gameboy version, but I can’t say for sure.
One change that I was not fond of is that the game is only playable in portrait mode. This means you are holding your phone up with one hand the whole time you are playing the game and the field of view is weird. This was not actually too much of a problem with DQ1, but I anticipate that it will be more of a problem as the series progresses and the games get longer and less suited for bite-sized gaming. It wound up not bothering me at all for this game, but I have my doubts moving forward.
There is not much to say about the game itself, it is still DQ1. The translation is still funny, and the game balance is actually more enjoyable than the original. You can beat it in a few hours and it is cheap. There are several DQ1 wannabes on IPhone, this is better than any of the ones I have played. I recently started DQII and bought DQIII (my second favorite game in the series), I should have more interesting things to say about them.
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Final Fantasy X
Now that I am settled in another new job and city, I can once again turn some of my attention to gaming and blogging. I have recently started working my way through my video game backlog. This backlog started building up over a decade ago during the second half of engineering school. After graduation, I was able to burn some of it down, but this was also a period of time in which PS2 games were available cheap as Blockbuster stores struggled to remain in business. The PS3/360 era backlog grew quite large while I was in law school, and I have moved three times for two different jobs since then.
The idea that a Final Fantasy game could ever find its way into my backlog seems ridiculous; the Final Fantasy series has been my favorite game series since 1990. The only games in the series, available in the US prior to FFX, that I did not complete were FFV and FFVIII. The PS1 release of FFV was so poorly translated, and had such long loading times, that I eventually stopped playing, and FFVIII eventually bored me to death. Sadly, FFX just fell at the wrong time. It came as I transitioned into my junior year in engineering, the most intense period at Clemson. I actually played almost the entire game; my file is saved at the last save point.
I know why I stopped. I made it through the icicle room, and was slaughtered by Brasca’s Final Summon’s second form Overdrive move. Faced with the prospect of going through the stupid icicle room again, I put it aside and never came back to it.
Over the past few weeks, I finally played FFX from start to finish. While you could probably spend well over one hundred hours on FFX, if you wanted to do all the side quests, I decided to just to the straight story play through. My play through took a little over 50 hours, I did grind a bit towards the end so I could get Ultima and a few other abilities that I wanted to play with. I can say, without reservation, that I thoroughly enjoyed the game.
My perspective on this game, playing it over Christmas, is very different than it was in 2002. It is very clear that that Square-Enix was trying to recapture the success of this game with FFXIII. The advancement system in FFXIII is superficially similar to FFX’s Sphere Grid, but is far more constrained, gating the player to prevent character advancement from outpacing story advancement. This makes FFXIII’s system far less satisfying, and makes that game feel even more linear.
Make no mistake; FFX is a very linear game. Like FFXIII, you run down corridors that allow for only minor diversion and you have no real ability to do anything out of order. FFX feels less linear because of the late game introduction of the airship (which does actually allow for free exploration), the open nature of the Sphere Grid, and the early availability of full gameplay. Like FFXIII, FFX features an open field area (Calm Lands/Airship Map) where side quests can be pursued late in the game. I think the main difference here is that the side quests take you back to earlier areas, and some new areas, so that it feels more open. Overall I think that it is the open nature of the Sphere Grid and the lack of a 20 hour tutorial that make FFX feel less linear. The story and overall structure are every bit as linear as FFXIII, but character advancement is non-linear and gameplay features are not gated by story considerations, so it does not feel like you are playing a novel, even though you are. It also helps that FFX is a much better novel, with more interesting characters, than FFXIII.
At the end I wound up getting wiped by the boss’s Overdrive again and having to go through the stupid icicle room to retry. The reason that the icicle room is so annoying is that is deviates from all of the gameplay in the main story up until that point. You have to run around, with a very tight camera view, and avoid icicles that appear out of nowhere. FFX actually has a lot of this kind of stuff in the game; chocobo racing, and dodging lightning bolts both require a totally different type of gameplay, but these are confined to optional side quests. The annoyance comes from gating the end boss from the final save point with this annoying gameplay mechanic. I pushed through and used my aeons as sacrificial shields against the boss’s Overdrive attack, the rest was easy.
I glad that I went back and played through this. Even playing the original PS2 version on a modern TV, it is a great looking game and a lot of fun.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Assault on the Backlog
I will be using this blog to chronicle my assault on my video game backlog. I have been carrying a backlog since the PS1 era, and it really grew towards the end of the PS2 era as Blockbuster was divesting itself of games for next to nothing. My rate of consumption slowed during the PS3 era when I went to law school, and in the last few years I had a daughter and moved up at work. Now that my life has settled down again, I am working my way through the massive backlog I have accumulated (thanks Steam). A few rules:
1) I will not be playing these games in any order. There are a few that I really want to get to, and I will play those first.
2) I will not play all games to completion, I will move on if it doesn't hold my interest.
3) There are still new games that I want to play, I will be discussing these as they avoid becoming part of the backlog.
I generally play RPGs, this means that my backlog is huge in terms of game hours to complete, I have no illusions that I will actually eliminate my backlog.
1) I will not be playing these games in any order. There are a few that I really want to get to, and I will play those first.
2) I will not play all games to completion, I will move on if it doesn't hold my interest.
3) There are still new games that I want to play, I will be discussing these as they avoid becoming part of the backlog.
I generally play RPGs, this means that my backlog is huge in terms of game hours to complete, I have no illusions that I will actually eliminate my backlog.
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