Game Ramblings #69 – Ni no Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom

More Info from Bandai Namco

  • Genre: ARPG
  • Platform: PS4
  • Also Available On: Windows

TL;DR

  • Action-focused RPG battle system that is a lot of fun, even if it’s drastically different than its predecessor
  • Biggest negative is the ease of the main story path through the game
  • Kingdom-building content is the biggest focus for the player’s power curve improvements, but is going to be love it or hate it
  • Lots of side content between collecting citizens and killing tainted monsters

Ni no Kuni II is a bit of a strange game.  While it’s technically a sequel, it only loosely shares a setting with the original, completely scrapped the original’s battle system, and more or less scrapped the originals Pokemon-style collection.  While it also brought over the visual style of the first game, this one was not done in tandem with Studio Ghibli, so it’s missing a lot of the world charm of the first one. Taken on its own though, this is a really good game.  Visually this is still fantastic and is obviously helped being on a generation newer hardware.  The characters and story are still light hearted and enjoyable to play.  In place of the first game’s combat, we now have a very Tales of action combat system that is strengthened by the inclusion of some collectible helpers.  While it doesn’t necessarily succeed across the board, the fact that I got a platinum trophy on it says a lot about how much I enjoyed my time in the game.

While not necessarily as unique as the original was at the time, this is still one of the finer examples of visuals in an RPG.

While there are a lot of differences, it’s still pretty obvious this is in the Ni no Kuni franchise and universe.  Visually, this is another pretty astounding game.  While not directly a Ghibli product, it’s pretty clear that the employees they brought over into Level-5 have continued their legacy in the sequel.  The writing also has a lot of that Ghibli feel.  Despite the serious underlying story of a child king losing his rule to a coup, the interactions between the story’s main characters are often lighthearted and often pretty funny.  It’s not shy about having serious moments, but it also doesn’t take itself too seriously.  There’s even a few nods for fans of the original game throughout, despite the sequel taking place presumably a few hundred years in the future.

However, that’s about where the similarities end.

Higgledys may not feel that useful, but they sure are kind of adorable.

The first obvious difference is that capture and collecting of monsters that you fight in the world is gone.  In its place are the capture and collection of Higgledys.  These act as little helpers in battle that for the most part act autonomously.  Some are attack focused, some are healing focused, etc.  While they do all have special attacks that can be used to provide additional support, they generally just kind of existed in my peripheral vision in-battle.  Once I had a party of four that worked for me early on, I never switched them out for a new crew, despite the fact that there were dozens to collect.  They could also be upgraded for better stats, but again I never really noticed the difference in practical use.

Combat is simple, but a lot of fun in practice.

However, the higgledys not being obviously useful didn’t really matter because the combat was a lot of fun on its own.  At the end of the day this is pretty close to a straight rip of the Tales of series combat.  You have skills and ranged attacks that use a mana resource, two kinds of basic attacks that also recharge mana, items that can be fired off if needed, and occasional special attacks.  If that rings like Tales of it’s because it is, but the pace of combat is just as fast as the source and everything feels impactful.

If there’s one real problem with the combat, it’s that the core story path really is just too easy.  Most trash can be cleared with an opening skill to clear away the bulk of the pack.  Enemies that get killed end up dropping frequent mana and health orbs, so I didn’t really need to use items that frequently.  Even on the boss end, the core mechanics around immunity during dodging often meant that I could take literally no damage in a fight if I was being even a little cautious.  This is alleviated somewhat by the ability to fight 60 “tainted” monsters, which end up being the real difficult content in the game if done at appropriate levels.  However, if you’re the type of player that skips side content in favor of breezing through the story, this won’t help you at all.

I’m a fan of city builders so when I was told to start building I couldn’t stop.

Also on the side content front is the entire ability to build your own kingdom.  For me, building the kingdom and dealing with activities associated with it was very likely close to 50% of the time spent in the game.  The core loop for kingdom building is to recruit characters, build buildings for their specialty skills, have them work in the buildings, and then either gather resources they find or have them research upgrades.  On the upgrade front this could be anything from the ability to craft and upgrade weapons and armor, to buildings that allow you to upgrade your higgledys, to buildings that provide passive effects in battle, and more.  In addition, characters must be recruited via completion of side quests AND the characters you recruit also often give their own side quests, so you’ll have the option of spending a lot of time directly dealing with your own citizens.

This is another section where if you don’t like side content, you’re going to simply miss out on a lot what is there.  On the other hand, if you want the difficulty of the game to be higher, not upgrading your kingdom is a good way to miss out on a significant portion of your party’s power curve via all the available upgrades.  However, if the completionist bug hits you, this is where you will be spending a lot of time.

It’s good to be king.

Realistically I enjoyed the hell out of this game and want to recommend it to everyone, but I suspect it’s more niche than my brain is telling me it is.  While the action combat system is probably more approachable than the first game’s system, you won’t really see it at its best unless you want to go searching for the actual difficult side monsters.  While I enjoyed the kingdom building and side quest process of searching for new citizens, I can see where people would think it’s slow and grindy.  While the story is entertaining for me, it definitely tends to lean into some pretty predictable results.  If that all still sounds fine to you though, go give this one a try; you certainly won’t find me telling you not to.

Game Ramblings #65 – Fire Emblem Warriors

More Info from Nintendo

  • Genre: Hack and slash ARPG
  • Platform: Switch
  • Also Available On: New Nintendo 3DS

TL;DR

  • Probably the best Warriors game that will come out this year
  • Same Warriors gameplay that can be expected from Dynasty / Samurai / Hyrule Warriors games
  • Good implementation of standard Fire Emblem mechanics (weapon triangle, class upgrades, etc)
  • History Mode not as varied as Hyrule Warriors‘ Adventure Mode, but still a nice side mode to the main story

Being perfectly honest, there’s no real surprise to playing Fire Emblem Warriors if you’ve played any previous Warriors title.  You’ve got a big ass field with forts, captains, commanders, and outposts that have to be captured and defeated.  You’ve got big story events that cause a constant ebb and flow of control of the field as you and your commanders attempt to win battles.  You’ve got a huge variety of units at your disposal of multiple types.  However, like Hyrule Warriors before it, this game takes the standard mechanics of its parent series and marries them nicely with the standard Warriors gameplay to do just enough to differentiate itself from the mainline games.

It’s not just combat mechanics that are pulled over from Fire Emblem. Unit class mechanics are as well.

The big thing that’s always been noticeable about the spinoff Warriors titles is that they nearly always do a good job bringing together the core hack and slash mechanics with things straight out of the franchise they are pulling from.  For Fire Emblem, this ends up pulling from a few specific areas.

On the gameplay side, the weapon triangle is the big one.  The core FE mechanic of swords beat axes beats lances beats swords is still there and as important as ever.  There’s also the archer advantage over flying units and the inclusion of mage and dragon units and their typical advantages and disadvantages.  Overall this does two great things for this game.  For one, AI units feel a lot more valuable than in my typical past experience with Warriors games.  While the AI battle pace is still slow, I can now order units into advantageous fights and assume they will win, allowing me to take the unit I’m in control of and deal with more pressing issues instead of having to be involved in every single captain or fort fight.  It also means that I was more willing to use a large roster than in past games.  I wouldn’t ever want to be at a complete disadvantage, so I’d spread my types around and hop between units, taking advantage of the weapon triangle to fight with as many units as possible throughout the game.

There’s also a few smaller features at play here that are straight out of Fire Emblem.  Like more recent games in the series, pair units are included, and allow for some flexibility in covering a disadvantage of one unit.  For example, pairing an axe unit to a sword unit allows for turning around the disadvantage of fighting lances pretty handily.  Unit bonds are also available, which unlock character-specific items that can be used for some of the higher level upgrades in the game’s version of the skill tree.  Finally, master seals are available, which unlock the higher tier class for a given unit.  In general, like Hyrule Warriors this game once again manages to feel a lot like its source despite the obvious change in style from a tactical RPG to an action RPG.

The rest of the mechanics are all Warriors, including the flashy specials.

Everything else that is there is to be expected.  You’re still going to be facing seemingly endless hordes of enemies while tearing through the battles.  You capture outposts to minimize extra spawns, capture forts to lower enemy morale, defeat captains and commanders to eliminate high powered dangers, throw flashy special attacks to eliminates dozens of units at a time, and more.  It’s as satisfying as the Warriors games ever are, even if it often feels like barely organized chaos at times.

That’s not to say there aren’t some weird little things that are fairly unique to this game.  Despite the unit variety, I pretty much exclusively stayed away from flying units.  While they were fine in the hands of AI, I often found that they would lift into the air during large combos, causing me to stay in the air flailing at nothing.  It was strange and frustrating, and generally just wasted a lot of time.  I also generally had some problems using enemy level as a gauge of relative power, particularly in the History Mode side content.  Even within single battles, I occasionally found myself battling things of the same level and same weapon type with wildly different results.  While some of this came down to simple character archetype stats, it threw me off enough times to consider it a bit unexpectedly weird.

The game likes to play favorites, giving you the generally most popular units from Shadow Dragon, Awakening, and Fates.

All that said, I generally didn’t have that many issues with the game.  Is it a deep game? Not really. You run around, kill shit, rinse and repeat with a bit of variety in mechanics between maps.  Is it an innovative game? Not really.  It takes the same core mechanics from Warriors and Fire Emblem and combines them into something that happens to work.  But is it a fun game?  Absolutely.  Even if it’s kind of stupid fun I can be pretty happy about that.

Game Ramblings #64 – NieR:Automata

More Info from Square-Enix

  • Genre: ARPG
  • Platform: PS4
  • Also Available On: Windows

TL;DR

  • Excellent story largely based around what it means to have a soul.  Multiple endings work fantastically in keeping you coming back.
  • Excellent combat that takes a mix of action and bullet hell mechanics and somehow blends them into a cohesive whole.
  • Biggest downside is that enemy variety is pretty low, with the environments being fairly sparse.

Now that the winter doldrums are here, I’ve got a bit of time to get to games that should have been played before and NieR was high on the list.  Having dipped my toes a bit into the overall Drakengard universe, I had some idea of what to expect but I was still surprised by how well this one was pulled off.  NieR is a game that spends a lot of time making you think about what it means to actually be alive and have a soul, whether synthetic beings can actually be capable of emotion, and ultimately what would happen when you find out everything you knew was a lie.  It wraps this into a fast-paced action combat system that seamlessly blends melee elements of standard ARPGs with ranged mechanics straight out of bullet hell games to create a game that is uniquely its own.

Combat mixes melee and bullet hell in a fantastic manner, usually to spectacular effect.

Since this is an ARPG and you’ll be spending the majority of your time involved in it, we’ll start off with combat.  Rather than being a straight melee hack and slash game, NieR blends in a lot of ranged mechanics for both player and enemy to make the actual process of fighting enemies a lot more varied than is typical of the genre.  Beyond the obvious picture of an enemy screen spamming bullets above, the player characters also have both a friendly pod that provides ranged damage as well as the ability on a lot of the weapons to do ranged attacks via slashing attacks that send out projectiles themselves.

The end result of all this is that directly hitting an enemy isn’t really all that important, and the movement ends up being the driving factor of battle.  Regardless of what range the player is at there’s always at least some damage source that can be used, so the actual process of avoiding damage becomes the most important factor.  The combination of all these attacks and an instant dodge with no cooldown gives the combat an extremely fun and fluid feel that I can’t really remember out of any other ARPG series.

Variety in battle is also a key, with multiple other battle types popping up to keep things from being repetitive.

It is worth noting that other battle systems do pop up from time to time to keep the player on their toes.  At times, you’ll take over giant ass robots that act as bullet sponges just for the sake of blowing lots of things up.  Sometimes you’ll enter a flight suit or hacking segments and switch between both vertical scrolling and dual-stick shooter modes to take out flying enemies.  Sometimes even in standard combat you end up in camera-restricted sections, giving a more side-scrolling focus to combat.  Just being able to hop into all of these things on the fly kept the game fresh when it could have otherwise been a long train of the same action combat on repeat.

It’s also worth noting that all of these combat types are tied into the same fantastic gearing system.  While there are the basic trappings of the genre (player level boosts base stats, weapons are upgradeable, the player’s ranged pod helper is upgradeable, etc), the real core of the system is the game’s chip system.  Chips are a customizeable feature where the player can slot helper items into a board.  Each item has some effect and some cost, so managing the benefits of the chips that are applied allows the player to setup the character in a style that fits how they want to play without being stuck in one path the entire game.  For my playthrough, I ended up applying a few basic increases (HP, Attack Power, etc), a few HUD helpers for convenience (in particular, one that revealed items on the overworld map), and most importantly for me a passive helper that gave me 40% of my own health back on a kill.  For me this meant that I could go into any encounter, dodge around like crazy killing things, and not be overly worried about taking too many hits.  If I took some hits it wouldn’t be a big deal.  I’d get a kill, heal up, and continue on.  A more passive player could load up on HP, defense, and ranged attack power, leaving it to their pod to whittle away enemies while they stay out of danger.  A real glass cannon could go heavy into attack power one shotting enemies in their way, but without any real safety if they got hit themselves.

Visuals are generally pretty good but some standout areas are definitely there, such as this area built entirely out of untextured assets.

The rest of the game may not be as good as core combat, but overall the pieces are all on average pretty damn good, and certainly better than most ARPGs out there.  Combat visuals are flashy but don’t interfere with the player’s ability to understand what is going on.  Environments are generally kind of sparse but all look really good with solid differences in theme between them.  Enemy variety is kind of low but the silhouettes always give proper immediate feedback as to what can be expected out of attacks.  The soundtrack has too many instances of repeating songs but what is there is extremely well done and catchy.  That’s kind of the overall end result where I can nitpick all day about specific things but end of the day what is there is all really high quality.

The story ends up being a great thinker if you pay attention, but it’s certainly not without its moments of comedy; intentional or not.

Ultimately I’d generally recommend playing this game if for no other reason than to play through the story.  I really don’t want to say any more than I did in the opener to avoid spoilers, but suffice to say if you are a fan of stories that involve ponderings over the meaning of life, this one will likely stick with you.  It’s also spread out over multiple characters to allow for great side-by-side comparisons of multiple viewpoints.  For reference, the game plays through the first half of the story from the perspective of two main characters (listed as A and B routes in the game).  It then provides a C/D route that plays through the second half of the story with two branching endings.  An E route then provides an ultimate ending after the conclusion of the game.  Because of the multiple viewpoints the story is able to give much greater depth to the overarching theme of what it means to truly be alive, with each character fighting their own struggle to figure it out.  The rest of the alphabet is then filled with a number of secret endings, typically the result of some joke sequence.  For example, the player can remove their OS core from the android player characters, immediately killing them and ending the game.

I suppose the question becomes, should I have gotten to this sooner? Ya, probably.  NieR is a game that mixes a lot of action combat elements into a cohesive whole that somehow works.  It adds a great sci-fi story from multiple viewpoints to keep you coming back to the game.  A dash of comedy here and there keeps things light, while segments of other combat types keeps the variety strong.  If you haven’t gotten to this one yet, I guess you can consider this my glowing recommendation.  Just make sure you play after the first credits roll; there really is a lot more there.

I’ll leave you with this – the best rendition of Romeo and Juliet of all time.