Showing posts with label Yasunori Mitsuda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yasunori Mitsuda. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Ni No Kuni: Level 5's magnum opus!!


The current generation has had some very interesting trends from downloadable content, system updates, digital distribution and retro 2D gaming highlighting the horizon. Perhaps one of the biggest talking points of the entire generation has been JRPGs. The genre had two bumper decades when the number of games on consoles used to decide the console wars. SNES, PS1 and PS2 had some of the greatest ever JRPGs which gave incredible popularity to these systems. The HD generation was a different kettle of fish. Large production teams and higher budgets meant game companies needed to have block buster titles. JRPGs weren’t given priority like they were in previous console cycles. That led to the false perception that the genre was died or dying. As the generation hit its stride the number of JRPGs slowly started to increase. It’s thus fortunate that some quality games started to roll in onto consoles in the form of Tales of Vesperia, Lost Odyssey, Final Fantasy XIII and Xenoblade Chronicles. Hence this brings me to Level 5’s magnificent Ni No Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch!  A traditional JRPG made in the mold of some of the classic games of the SNES era but with all the bells and whistles of an HD generation! Ni No Kuni is the prime example of how a traditional JRPG can turn heads in the new generation.

A couple of years ago when Level 5 unveiled Ni No Kuni for the PS3 after the success of the Japan only DS game of the same name it was clear that Level 5 meant business in giving the HD generation its best traditional JRPG which it required. 2009’s Lost Odyssey was the only game which acted as flag bearer for traditional JRPGs and while it was a fantastic game in its own right, it was a sinfully overlooked. But Level 5 took it upon itself of not only making a great JRPG but to make sure it sold a few copies through aggressive marketing. Coupling itself with the animation giant Studio Ghibli, it crafted a deep RPG with some of the most astounding visuals and art style to grace a gaming console. Screenshots and trailers looked great but seeing the game on a proper TV was something else! So finally after 8 wonderful months of playing non-stop I have finally reached the end credits. Incredible is a word that comes in mind when talking about Ni No Kuni!!

In the following paragraphs I will be jotting down things which I liked about the game and things which I didn't:

LIKES:

Make no mistake, Ni No Kuni ranks as one of the most beautiful and colourful game ever created! The game looks gorgeous when in motion. The level of animation fluidity is outstanding and the vivid colours almost ‘bleed’ off the screen. The towns and dungeons are spectacularly rendered and visiting any new place was an awe-inspiring experience. The current generation has given us some amazingly realistic and mature looking games which blurred the lines of the uncanny valley, but Ni No Kuni is one of the rare games that seem to have bucked this common trend with this colourful bonanza! Level 5 partnership with Studio Ghibli was an inspired one as the studio was responsible for the amazing art style of the game. It was truly like playing a Studio Ghibli movie.!That in itself was a surreal experience and which definitely made the game stand out from its peers! I will be very surprised if the game doesn't win any awards for its visuals and art design.


Level 5 has earned its stripes in the JRPG industry as a seminal game company and the game play of Ni No Kuni once again shows how much the company and its founder Akira Hino understand what makes JRPGs click. The battle system is a hybrid of real-time and turn-based mechanics in lieu Grandia, Xenoblade Chronicles and Valkyria Chronicles. The battle system uses the whole Pokémon/Persona mechanics of using monsters to do all the battling. I know that a lot of people were put off by that and I too have never been a Pokémon fan but Ni No Kuni borrows that feature quite smartly. I finished the game with 90% of the familiars I captured in the first 20-30 hours of the game. What makes the combat involving is how tactics have to be changed on the fly especially during boss battles. The stiff difficulty kept me on my toes. Don’t let the cute exterior fool you into thinking that the game is easy as it’s not.  I had to have good levels and good equipment to overcome tough monsters and bosses!

The length of the game was very satisfactory. It took me 62 hours to finish the main story and 90% of the side quests and bounty hunts (which there were quite A LOT of). As soon as the game finished I found myself back in the game world with new side quests which were tough and complex and an ultimate secret boss (whom I am still trying to fight with, having to go through a long series of hoops). There is also the coliseum to compete in. So basically the game can easily take 80 hours to fully beat.


The sound productions were top notch. Studio Ghibli’s alumni Joe Hisaishi produced the entire sound track which was epic and yet very heart warming. As his first foray in games Hisaishi-san did a fantastic job as his work easily rivals that of Nobou Uematsu and Yasunori Mitasuda. The voice acting has got to be one of the best this year. The last couple years has seen British voice actors coming to the fore: Xenoblade Chronicles, Pandora’s Tower and The Last Story had some amazing voice work and Ni No Kuni once again follows the trend. The entire British cast was pitch-perfect esp. the main antagonists but  the best performance was by Mr. Drippy, The High Lord of High Fairies and Oliver’s trusty side kick, who had a thick Welsh accent which was just wonderful. More games should have Welsh accents as far as I am concerned! The rest of the cast were right up there although I did feel the ‘weakest’ performance was of Oliver as it sounded too sweet and innocent. Guess that is what the aim was in the first place!

Oliver’s journey after his mother death was quite heart breaking and poignant. His quest to bring back his mother from another realm was a very effective plot hook which kept me going on ahead. Not many games have the courage to have such a depressing back ground yet Ni No Kuni wore it as a badge of honour  Yes the plot isn't a complex or epic but had enough charm to pull at the heart strings. What backed up the good plot were the characters; Oliver, Esther and Swaine weren't the most fleshed out main characters but I always felt close to them and egged them up on their perilous journey. The relationship of the 3 heroes really took the simple plot and made it very personal.


While the game was truly fantastic there were just a couple of things which did not sit in well with me:

DISLIKES:

The most glaring negative was the amazing voice acting. As I mentioned before the voice work in Ni No Kuni was quite strong, but there was so little of it! In this day and age a game of Ni No Kuni’s pedigree should have been fully voiced. Namco Bandai was in charge of the English localization and I just feel they may have cut corners. I mean Namco Bandai’s own JRPG franchise: Tales games are 90% voiced yet Ni No Kuni had very little voice work! Sure it isn't a deal breaker but I think more voice acting would have certainly made the game more immersive.

Level 5 was clearly inspired by the SNES era as it lovingly recreated it for the HD era in Ni No Kuni, yet the plot narrative still retained the old school feel. What that meant that sometimes the plot took a back seat and that kind of killed off tension of the plot. Once again this doesn't really affect the game on a whole but it would have been nice if it told the story in a proper way.

Lastly the ending was very VERY disappointing. Without going into detail to avoid spoilers the ending didn't do it for me. I am sure many of you guys will disagree but for me the game’s ending lacked the ‘oomph’ I was expecting.


Ni No Kuni will be fondly remembered in the years ahead as the game which not only stood against the dreaded perception that traditional JRPGs were dead but did amazingly well sales wise. Even the harshest critics of the genre warmed up to the game and its fairy tale aesthetic. Level 5 should be lauded for its effort as it created the company’s second best game (after Dark Cloud 2). The current generation will be remembered for a lot of mature games and themes but Ni No Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch will remain the darling of this generation with lush visuals, solid game play, top notch audio and a beautiful setting. If anyone is looking for a deep and fascinating JRPG experience then Ni No Kuni fits the bill perfectly. My rating: 9.3!

Friday, February 17, 2012

The best video game I played in 2011!

1) Xenoblade Chronicles – Wii:

It was maybe e3 of 2009 when I spotted a game by the odd name of Monado: The Beginning of the World on Gamespot’s e3 page. I was very excited when I read the small preview of the Japanese version and saw the name Tetsuya Takahashi, the director of the awesome Xeno series for the PS1 and the PS2, and Monolith Soft, the dev company which made Xenosaga trilogy , at the helm of this new title. And the fact It was coming on the JRPG starved Wii was another reason for my excitement. But as the days and months wore (which brought a change of name: XenoBlade, which resulted in me throwing a tantrum) there was almost no news of an English version anywhere, while the game’s momentum was picking up Japan. When it got released in Japan to very high praise and sold really well, I seriously started to get worried that the game won't make it out in English.

I was expecting some sort of news to come out from the US for an English release, it took me by surprise that game was being localized by Nintendo of Europe, now dubbed Xenoblade Chronicles. Nintendo of Europe's website even had little video snippets highlighting the game world and the music. Slowly small bits of info started streaming out and it all made for awesome reading, and soon enough a concrete release was announced and what was more bizzare that the game was only coming Europe and not the US. Not that I cared that much as long as I could play this bad boy!!. August 19 was D-day and as soon as I got my copy from Amazon UK (via a family friend who was fortunately visiting Pakistan at the time) the game didn't pop out of the Wii for a good 2 months and this was the only game I was indulging in, without even bating an eye for the huge games during that time (Gears of War 3, Infamous 2 to name a few).

Was the game as good as they said it would be? HELLS YEAH!!!!. The game literally came from left field and has gone on to reinvent the JRPG genre which  considered to be stagnating for a while (its a conspiracy I tell you!!). Monlith Software once again proved that they have command over the genre, rivalling the JRPG giants of SquareEnix and Atlus and NIS.

Xenoblade Chronicles is the perfect example of how to meld two different sub-genres i.e WRPG and JRPG and concoct a game which eschews all the fault of both the genre to create something quite unique. For starters the world setting, the melodramatic plot with sci-fi trapping isn't too far from what you get in an traditional JRPG. The melodrama has been toned down quite a bit especially if you compare it with other recent games in the genre, but still have enough twists, turns and shocking revelations which makes for very intriguing viewing.


The characters, too adhere to the mould of JRPGs but the dev team has done a really good job in making all the characters stand out from the crowd of emo-filled, angst ridden young heroes. The characterization is pretty solid where every character can be sympathized with and each adding something to plate to the flow of the story. The best bit is that these are NOT cliched characters that you will find in any X,Y,Z RPGs but rather they have pretty distinct personalities and agendas. Tetusya Takahashi and his cohorts have once again pushed the limits on how to present characters in a JRPG.


So right off the bat the game is following the JRPG blue print quite nicely but as soon as the game goes into high gear the influences from the WRPG genre start kicking in. The game world is HUGE, I mean the game takes place on top of 2 titanic gods for crying out loud!. If recent JRPGs felt claustrophobic then Xenoblade Chronicles will inundate the gamers with a humongous world to explore and discover. Hell discovering new area rewards player with experience points which really takes the cake if you like exploring, which also does away with linear exploration native to JRPGs. Another feature taken from WRPGs is the INSANE amount of side quests to do. Every new area or town have LOADS of NPCs almost lining up for the heroes help, from hunting monsters to finding items to raw material gathering, they are all there.



But it’s the battle system though which fully combines the West and the East game designs. It’s a quasi-real-time/turn based battles system fought on the field (i.e. no more screen shattering battle arenas), with abilities to choose on the fly (coupled with a cool down mechanics). The battles become pretty hectic but its very easy to see a neat turn based mechanic is also at play. This is where I think that Monolith Soft has done an awesome job as Xenoblade's battle system works for both fans of JRPGs and WRPGs. I will even go on to say that this game may be a very rare kind of JRPGs that caters to any sort of RPG player, and this where the game really shines more than its peers. So yeah I consider the battle of game as one of the greatest in RPGs. That is a huge claim especially for a game on the Wii and how JRPGs have kinda lost their steam in the last few years, but the level of polish and genius present in the battle system makes a lasting impression and something which other RPG makers will do well to take a note of. What this also means that Monolith Soft didn't really chuck out the JRPGs mechanics out the window in order to make something new, but stuck to what makes a JRPG tick while incorporating the WRPGs mechanics and that is the real achievement of the developers and the game.

The customizations options are also similar to many of the great WRPGs where every character can be molded into however the player wants them. And that's not all, there is a really good loot system in place as well where the players can gather all sorts of equipment, weapons and trinkets. But these WRPG mechanics are once again balanced with the focus on progressing the story like in any JRPG of the past.

As I mentioned earlier how the battle system merges the JRPG and the WRPG, I will say that the entire game is like that. The perfect marriage of two pretty different genres is a sight to behold. Fans of both the genres have been at logger head for years now. Both set of parties have very convincing arguments, but XenoBlade Chronicles shows if developers are game enough to experiment with both the genres they can end up with something really special and the game is a true testament of that.

Now add all of this RPG goodness with some really fantastic production values, even though the Wii is not an HD enable console likes its competition and you get a game that exceeds all sorts of expectations and as well as silencing the naysayers. Technically the game isn't up to the mark with some of the high end Wii games like Super Mario Galaxy series or Metriod Other M but overcomes that technical deficiency with incredible art style and a grandiose scale unlike anything seen before in the JRPG genre. Though technically it maybe lacking but surprising the game rarely chugs or experiences a hiccup, even with so much happening on the screen. But for me it really is the art style of the game is really carries the game to upper echelon of the genre as it juggles sci-fi motifs with the more earthy aspect of the game world with aplomb.

Even the sound track is top notch with some of the biggest name in the industry in the shape of Yoko Shinumura and Yasonari Mitasuda and the 3-person band ACE+ who basically have produced one of the best sound track of the year!

I don’t know how many people in Pakistan have given Xenoblade Chronicles a look in especially as the Wii is usually considered a 'kiddie' console, its really a shame that this game will not get its fair due in the Pakistani gaming circles.

On a personal level I am of the small percentage of gamers who still revere the JRPG sub-genre and am confused at all the hoopla of the ‘decline’ of the genre. But even then Xenoblade Chronicles has done a great job in elevating itself in a pretty saturated field which is a HUGE accomplishment with the Wii on its last legs. Initially I was kind of worried that the story telling would take a hit considering the criticism Tetsuya Takahashi got for the Xenosaga trilogy, but already having put in more 40 hours in the game I am very satisfied at the balance of storytelling mechanics (i.e. cut-scenes) and game play. Sure its not on the epic level of the first XenoSaga game but its still a lot which is awesome!.

So in conclusion 2011 did have a lot of truly magnificent games across the board, more so on the PS3 and 360, but this unassuming title on a system which is way past its prime took most of my time. Although I still have not finished the game I have loved every minute of it!


Honorable Mentions:

Xenoblade Chronicles was indeed an awesome game, but 2011 was a phenomenal year for the video gaming industry and personally as a gamer there never has been a better time to indulge in medium of video games. Here some of the games I enjoyed last year:

1) Uncharted 3: Drakes Deception
2) Batman: Arkham Asylum
3) Radiant Historia
4) Infamous 2
5) Legend of Heroes: Trails in the Sky
6) Beyond Good and Evil HD
7) Super Mario 3D Land
8) de Blob 2
9) Tactic Ogre: Let us cling togather
10) Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword

Sunday, May 22, 2011

My most anticipated RPGs of 2011

2011 so far has been a pretty good year for a number of genres like FPS or action adventure games and it would seem (from the release dates) that this trend will continue for the rest of the year as well. OK lets see now we have Gears of Wars 3 primed for release very soon, Infamous 2 June's debut is pretty close and Uncharted 3 is set for the fall release. But as much as this year has been awesome, there have been a woefully small number of quality RPGs coming out in 2011 and this fact is indicative of the new direction the current generation is taking. This is not say that 2011 has been or will be barren for RPGs, on contrary there are number of pretty solid RPGs coming out and although I am a few months late in bringing out this post (there have been around 3 good RPGs released in this time), but from today till the 2nd of June I will be discussing 10 of my most anticipated RPGs of this year (well...of 6 months that is):

1) Xenoblade Chronicles - Wii -September :



A simple and plan fact is that Wii has not been a power house for RPGs (even with the incredible popularity of the console), but unlike Nintendo's previous console (GameCube) there have been 3-5 solid RPGs for gamers to choose. But the console is still missing THAT epic RPG, which would define the console for RPG players. This is about to change though with the release of two RPGs from experienced developers. First I will talk about Xenoblade Chronicles. The game comes from the team which has made a HUGE name for themselves with the superlative Xenogears and XenoSaga series, helmed by Tetsuya Takahashi and the game company Monolith Soft, backed by Nintendo (phew). Now that is a quite a pedigree if you ask me, one which will catapult this game to a top billing for RPG players. The game was originally called Monado: Beginning of the World, but was thankfully changed to Xenoblade in honor of Takahashi (the creator of the Xeno brand games). Nintendo has a sure-fire winner on its hands and has done well in becoming the publisher, meaning the quality of the localization will be great. As a Wii owner I can't wait to get my grubby mitts on this one as soon as its out.

The premise of the plot takes place on top two crystallized gods where humanoids and machines have taken up residence and are now embroiled in a never ending war. From the outset the game already has a unique backdrop which will inevitable open up into something epic. Tetsuya Takahashi has also pointed out that the narrative will be quite different from the cut-scene heavy XenoSaga series (much to my chagrin), while also having emphasis on exploration. Consider this as an amalgam of eastern story-telling with western game play tropes. This will be very interesting indeed!


The game play resembles Final Fantasy XII (ala offline MMORPG), while players will have the freedom to input commands as well. I am one of those who actually really liked the MMORPG mechanics from Final Fantasy XII and after going through quite a few of game play video that mechanics looks very solid in Xenoblade Chronicles. I am very excited for the game play and with a promise of 50-60 hours of the main plot Xenoblade Chronicles has a lot going for it.


The technical aspect of the game looks really spiffy with some awesome visuals, perhaps one of the best looking Wii game to date! The screen shots and videos showcase huge environs to explores, beautiful vistas to behold and attention of a lot of detail. I mean lets face it, Wii isn't known for a its graphics, but Xenoblade Chronicles really does look good. For me the look of the game is very similar to many of the outstanding PS2 RPGs and I felt a twinge of nostalgia looking at screenshots and videos of the game.

But the soundtrack has all the bearing to be very memorable. Yoko Shimomura (of Kingdom Hearts and Legend of Mana fame) and Yasunori Mitsuda (of Chrono Trigger/Cross and XenoSaga fame) providing the sound track!!!. I mean two of the finest composers in the game industry working together can only mean that the sound track well be of dizzying quality.

So yeah it will be a huge understatement to say that I am excited for Xenoblade Chronicles. The game has that PS2 RPG vibe to it and that can only be a good thing (PS2 RPG library the greatest ever!). The Wii has been a huge success for Nintendo but the lack of good RPG has been disappointing, so here hoping that Xenoblade Chronicles lives up to the hype and finally give the Wii the epic RPG it deserves before it rides off into the sunset.

Join me tomorrow for another anticipated RPG.