Humanity has risen!
Arcane
It's Idea Factory man... don't get your hopes up.
I played it briefly on consoles, the combat system is garbage, and the story and characters all kind of horrids even for this type of material. Not worth playing.
It's Idea Factory man... don't get your hopes up.
I was gonna pre-order as well, but it seems that all DLCs included in the pre-order are just powerful weapons that kind of "break" the game. Apparently you can disable them, but even so...I would more willing to give it a pass if it was based on Ghostlight PS3 version but instead they appeared to gone to present the best option on PC so pre-ordered.
Oriental Blue was just released.
A GBA JRPG that's non-linear and apparently even has choices and consequences.
LP or GTFO.In other news, I clocked in 40 hours in Yumina by now. 2 routes done, one more to go before I can unlock the "True" route. It is so _bad_, but kind of interesting at the same time. In an academic way. That combat system is just so...
Yeah, at first I wasn't interested, having not heard of it before, but non-linear JRPG with C&C sounds interesting. Anyone wants to give it a try and report?Oriental Blue was just released.
A GBA JRPG that's non-linear and apparently even has choices and consequences.
Can someone tell me more about this one?
Oriental Blue was just released.
A GBA JRPG that's non-linear and apparently even has choices and consequences.
Can someone tell me more about this one?
On the surface, it looks like a typical Japanese RPG, but it's actually quite complex. This game uses what they call a "Free Scenario System," which is basically a fancy term for a branching storyline. Although the game only has one ending, the path you take along the way there will probably be very different from someone else's playthrough.
Some events are determined randomly, others are determined by the time on the in-game clock. Your actions also influence what might happen. Unlike most RPGs, you don't have scripted wins or losses in boss battles. If you lose against a boss who's trying to steal a certain item, they will steal it and get away with their crime. If you beat them, you'll keep it safe. The boss battles in this game are very challenging, so even if you're unable to beat the boss, you can continue to play through the story. In fact, certain events are only available when you've lost.
[...] There are plenty of side quests to take, and a message board with requests from people all over the world. If you take too long to finish them, the requests might be finished by someone else. The little girl that's sick in bed will die if you ignore her, and the town that's being invaded by monsters might turn into a ghost town unless you intervene. There's a lot going on in the world, and you're free to pursue or ignore whatever you want.
Why would anyone LP Yumina? The story is honestly generic tripe. The dungeon crawling is fun but it's also slow as shit so most of the LP will be "I had to spend 5 hours grinding so I can pass the next boss"
I hope the other two games in the series are as good.
lulzA boy trying to find the paradise he once lost arrived in a secluded garden at the end of the world, where he found five girls. Not knowing himself what the result would be, he took out five seeds and distributed them to the girls, driven by a sense of duty and perhaps even the faintest murmurings of something like hope. One by one, the girls planted the seeds they had been entrusted with in the ground around them, waiting for the day when they would bear fruit.
But whether or not this day will come remains to be seen - everything hinges on one final struggle to learn where a true paradise is to be found.
Our story picks up immediately after the events of Grisaia no Meikyuu, with Kazami Yuuji having been detained for suspected involvement with an international terrorist organization, lead by Heath Oslo, that has managed to enter Japan's borders with a devastating new weapon of mass destruction in hand. Meanwhile, at Mihama Academy, the remaining students find themselves with time running out - due to financial issues, the school is set to close within the month. Over the past year, though, the girls of Mihama have finally begun to find their own legs, thanks to Yuuji's involvement - are they really just going to bury their heads in the sand and let the world change around them? And are they really willing to let the man who changed their lives slip away without so much as trying to win him back? As the end of their time at Mihama Academy approaches, Amane, Makina, Sachi, Yumiko, and Michiru find themselves arriving at a single conclusion.
How much a group of students can do in the face of countries and organizations far bigger than any individual could hope to be remains to be seen. In the first place, Yuuji's position is far more complicated than any of them could have imagined, as he finds himself embroiled in an elaborate game of super-political chess revolving around both himself and an inconceivable new system slumbering in the depths of CIRS - a system that Yuuji may have more of a connection to than he thinks. One thing is for certain, though - the girls of Mihama are no longer willing to let the world steal things away from them without at least a bit of resistance first. And with help from a mysterious individual known only as Thanatos, they may just achieve their goal...
The final chapter in the Grisaia series, featuring Prologue De La Grisaia, a prologue set before Yuuji's arrival at Mihama; Blanc Aile no Tane, the overarching story's grand conclusion; a smorgasbord of bonus eroscenes; and an after story to the events of Blanc Aile no Tane.
lulz
In other news, Grisaia no Kajitsu is GOOD. God damn it, take note japfags. You can have actual FUN in the drivel you scribble! The protagonist doesn't have to be a spineless worm! Why didn't I spot this earlier (the school setting, obv.)? I hope the other two games in the series are as good.
Woah dude, thank you so much!Not a translation, but a balance patch with an optional hardcore mode was released for Secret of Evermore, which seems to overhaul a lot of the game.
Oriental Blue was just released.
A GBA JRPG that's non-linear and apparently even has choices and consequences.
So does anyone translate anything besides Japanese dating/school/bird simulators anymore?
So does anyone translate anything besides Japanese dating/school/bird simulators anymore?