Still Playing Atelier Ryza: Ever Darkness & the Secret Hideout as my primary game. I think I should be in the later half of the story, not sure though. Pretty much just playing this now, so should be able to finish it soon-ish.

One exception though, with all the Donkey Kong drops, I started Donkey Kong Country 2 (NSO SNES) again. And I don’t know what issue I had last time, but this time I was able to clear the first area pretty easily. Died couple of times in last level, but other than that it was pretty simple. I didn’t find all the secrets though. Only 2 DK tokens, though got most of the KONG letters, not sure about other secrets, but I am sure I missed some.

Stopped playing at first level of the second area / world. The lava one. Only started it on impulse and may play it a bit here or there, but will return to it seriously only after finishing Atelier Ryza. I really enjoyed playing it though, hope difficulty won’t spike too much as the game progresses.

What about all of you? What have you been playing?

  • slimerancher@lemmy.worldOPM
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    8 days ago

    Yeah, I would love to know more about the series. Don’t have any idea about it, so not sure what to ask, so leaving it for you to decide.

    BTW I think we have talked about this before, but I couldn’t find it int my saved posts, so maybe not.

    • Phelpssan@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      SRW games are love letters to fans of Mecha anime that also happens to be surprisingly good Strategy RPGs.

      Gameplay loop is fairly simple, short VN-style story sections -> Customize/upgrade units -> Battle.

      Stages are turn-based, and late game you can deploy around 20 units. Recent games are more on the easy side (with SRW30 being the biggest offender), but some of the older games like the OG series have a rather good challenge curve. They’re very friendly to handheld play since you can save at almost any time.

      Most games are crossovers of 15+ different anime, and the main story is a combination of plotlines from those series. This is one of the reasons why familiarity with at least part of the series helps, if you know nothing at all you about them it may get quite overwhelming with too many characters and plotlines. To their credit, they do a decent job trying to ease you into it, slowly adding series and also featuring a very detailed encyclopedia with series details, character and mecha profiles.

      The fancy battle animations are this game series’ trademark, mimicking in good detail the original anime series.

      If that sounds interesting, there’s 4 games on the Switch with official english translation: The V/X/T trilogy and the most recent game which was the 30 year anniversary game for the series.

      I personally think the V/X/T games are much better, and would recommend any of them as a starting point. There’s virtually no connection between them (just small cameos), so you can play them at any order.

      They need to be imported physically or bought from eastern eShops, and one thing to keep in mind that for T you need specifically the Asian version. For V, X and 30 both the Asian and the Japanese versions are multi language.

      • slimerancher@lemmy.worldOPM
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        6 days ago

        Thanks for the info, saving it for future reference.

        I don’t want to buy the physical versions, so will have to see if I should go the PC route or try to get it from another region.

        Any chance any of them will be coming to west?

        • Phelpssan@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          Any chance any of them will be coming to west?

          The general consensus is “almost zero”. Would be a licensing nightmare since they’d need approval for the license holders of those 15+ different series in the US/EU. Releasing Japan/Asian versions with english support is probably their best way to support a western audience without dealing with this.

          That being said, it’s not that hard to buy from a different eShop region. When I bought Atri I simply created a Japanese account using a different e-mail and got a prepaid card for that region from play-asia.com.

          • slimerancher@lemmy.worldOPM
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            6 days ago

            Yeah, the only issue is I don’t like to create multiple accounts, but I guess is there is no getting around it.

            You can change your own account’s region too, but you can’t do it if you have any money in your account, even 0.01, and that’s not possible when using prepaid card.

            Thanks for the info.

            • Phelpssan@lemmy.world
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              5 days ago

              ou can change your own account’s region too

              Heard that’s easy to do as well, but haven’t tried.

              I’m used to having multiple accounts for different regions, have been doing that since the Xbox360 days.