Off-the-cuff writings about, and sometimes reviews of, books and video games from a nerd's boxes of backlog. Warning: this is not a spoiler-free blog!
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Video Game Potpourri
I recently traded for some games from K.W.'s Games Exchange. Since they've got a three-day, no-questions-asked return policy, I figured that I should actually try out what I bought so that it could be returned if they didn't turn out.
Now, into the specifics. I traded Final Fantasy V (GBA), Final Fantasy Adventures III (GB), and Tales of Phantasia (GBA) for Dragon Ball: Origins, Golden Sun: Dark Dawn, and Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon (all three of which are for the Nintendo DS).
All of these games checked out, and even Dragon Ball: Origins was decent. Not much more than what I expected, but if the game's as long as its pre-start screen intro suggests, it was quite a steal at 5$.
The other two titles are solid RPGs. Golden Sun: Dark Dawn is the third in the oft-forgotten Golden Sun trilogy, and though it's already introduced two features which set it apart from most other RPGs that I've played, its intro is prohibitively long. It's not as bad as Twilight Princess - but 20 solid minutes of exposition and set up without any break for wandering around or non-scripted interaction is a bit much. Especially if your game has a disclaimer about needing basic reading ability to enjoy it.
All the same, even the game's exposition heavy intro had some elements of interactivity which helped to buoy its experience among the sea of dialogue and name dropping. One of these is the encyclopedia feature, that allows you to tap on certain nouns in dialogue for more information; and the other is the ability to choose your character's emotional responses to various situations. These choices might not resonate very seriously in terms of plot or relationships, but at the very least it's a distraction from all of the exposition going on. That the intro needed this sort of thing to keep it interesting is something of a bad sign. I'll soldier on in the game later though.
Shadow Dragon is by far the best of the bunch. Its simple use of the dual screens really makes it appealing, and even though it's been a while since I played a Fire Emblem game, its interface makes it as easily played as if I had recently finished The Sacred Stones or Path of Radiance.
However, I don't remember how Fire Emblem handles the balance of the weapons. I'm sure I'll pick it up quickly once I actually start my play through of this one.
Speaking of games I'm actually playing through, the second dungeon of Link's Awakening has been beaten. It took some doing since I needed to grab some bombs (huzzah for no hand-holding!), but all the same, it was done.
However, in my travels I came across Crazy Tracy, and since I had the rupees I let her rub her medicine on Link. So, when the boss of the second dungeon singed away my last heart with a fire ball I was instantly revived.
All the same, my save file still shows that I've died three times. Is this really fair? I went to the extra trouble of getting what's basically a fairy in a bottle, and I still "died"? I suppose the system's right, on a technicality. Plus, it's also the way that A Link to the Past counts deaths. Nonetheless, hopefully my death count stays in the single digits at least.
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