Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Second Star To The Right

And don't bother about morning.


Things have been going along rather well with Tales of Vesperia.  I've actually gotten to the point where I can actually do some dedicated material farming without tearing my hair out over leaving the plot dangling.


Vesperia is a bit odd; the whole 'sandbox' gets thrown at you fairly quickly, but the sand doesn't really fill in until something like 30 hours in, maybe 20 if you're good and rushing through the storyline.  The game's airship is actually pretty awesome, being a an actual sea vessel hooked up to a big flying magic whale/Esper, with the addition benefit of water landings and takeoffs.  With some minimal sidequesting, you can land just about anywhere that's even remotely flat.  The odd part is that there is a constantly shifting day/night and weather cycle, which affect monster encounters and town/dungeon condition (and encounters in those dungeons).  It sounds fairly standard, but there's lots of RNG shenanigans involved. 


I remember being very irritated in my first run-through, but I believe that my judgment was really clouded at the time, with personal problems leaving me really sour about nearly everything.  I'm actually relishing wandering over certain regions at nighttime and jumping out to slaughter giant killer ladybugs for glowing rocks and other monstrous ridiculousness.  Tales has a glorious tradition of having goofy monsters to beat on, (even sobersides Abyss threw angry tuning forks and knights with trumpet-bazookas at you) and Vesperia proudly carries it on.  I haven't encountered the glorious wackiness of gigantic demon canopy beds or fortress turtles, but there's a much better variety over all.  How about monsters like birds with actual bugle beaks or paper fan wings, bush-tortoise things trample you with fruit, bees with gun stingers (yes Sonic did it first, but these are organic gun bees), and starfish that attack you on land and sound like Teletubbies when you shank 'em?   That's just a sample of the crazy bestiary.  And they all drop worthwhile goodies, including materials to make awesome loot with.


Now why didn't I ever want to play this again?  Well, even in angst The Harvest Never Rests!

Thursday, May 18, 2017

Devil's Lab

Yeah, seriously.  Those dudes that wandering up and down the internet saying Tales of Vesperia is inspired by Final Fantasy VII are idiots.  It's clearly inspired by Final Fantasy VI.  So there!


Anyway, I'm finally getting back into the swing of things.  The Vesperia campaign is still going along pretty well, helped by the fact that I'm not a angry little ball of angst this go-around.  Sometimes even escapism doesn't help you escape things.  I'm noticing a few more little details and nuances, and with the help of a decent FAQ or two I've figured out some the sidequests and extra events without having to save scum and tear my hair out.  Tales-style sidequesting can be mean.


I've finally have some semblance of aptitude for the combat system, thought I doubt I'll have anything like actual mastery.  Watching my main character zip around and unleash the turbo ginsu upon freakish hordes is pretty rewarding, and not whiffing every other attack makes things even sweeter.  Throwing in the mage-support that every good RPG should do and things start turning into a symphony of flashy doom.  The wonders of Tales-style New Game plus allowing for characters to retain the high-end skills and spells just amplifies things.


Repede the Ninja Dog of awesomeness is still very much a favorite for me, helping fetch all sorts of shinies--especially the much-needing crafting materials--with grace, aplomb, and without my supervision.  Vesperia has far and away the best stealing system in the series that I've encountered, with just about everything having something for Repede to grab, reasonable chances for the grab to work, and little worry about not grabbing that super-unique item or it's lost forever bullshit (I'm looking at you Tales of the Abyss); plus it's automated, so I don't have to sit there and manually spam a command instead of unleashing the Harvest properly.


About the closest thing to a major gripe I have so far...well it's an odd thing to say, but there's not the sense of otherworldly grandeur that I got from Legendia.  The graphics and sounds and overall tone is very, very good and a vast improvement over the dust-bowl depression of Abyss (especially in the graphics department) and there's some the same sense of discovery, mystery and plain fun going on.  I think that Legendia is really in a class of it's own there.  At least the monsters are fun too look at and more fun to fight.  We've got stuff like giant wasp-things with gun-stingers, 'mermen' that are really weresharks that beat you with boat anchors, and some other fun stuff.


Unfortunately, it's time to wander off, but The Harvest Never Rests!