I finished Trails in the Sky this morning (not last night — it got to 4am and I still hadn’t reached the final boss so I decided to save it for this morning, and it was well worth the wait) so today saw that age-old question, “What to Play Next” rear its head.
I fancied something light-hearted and silly, so I chose Hyperdimension Neptunia. I knew nothing about this prior to starting to play, and just knew that it was rather silly, very Japanese, packed with rather unnecessary fanservice (that I secretly quite enjoy) and not necessarily what you’d call “good” by the traditional definition. However, given that many of the games I’ve enjoyed most of all over the course of the last year have not been what you’d call “good” by the traditional definition (Nier springs immediately to mind) I was willing to give it a chance.
I think I’m going to like it.
Hyperdimension Neptunia casts you in the role of Neptune, a personification of the cancelled console the Sega Neptune. Cast out of Celestia by her goddess sisters (each of whom represents one of the Xbox, PlayStation and Wii respectively) and forced to fend for herself in the lands of Gamindustri, it’s up to her to… well, I don’t really know yet, as I haven’t got that far and the events in the intro left her with amnesia which she conveniently points out is to help the players understand what is going on. I swear I’m not making any of what I just said up. This is indeed a game that represents the seventh-generation “console wars” as ridiculous anime-style battles between anthropomorphised hardware manufacturers.
Besides the silly premise, which I have a lot of time for, there actually seems to be quite an interesting game under there, too. The game unfolds in several distinct components — visual novel-style storytelling sequences; a “between missions” bit where you can shop, read background information and discover sidequests; and dungeon-crawling. The game isn’t really a traditional JRPG in terms of structure — there’s no wandering around field screens or towns, for example, and the story scenes all unfold using head-and-shoulders shots of the characters rather than in-engine graphics, like a visual novel rather than a standard JRPG.
Where the interesting gameplay comes in is in the dungeon-crawling component. Structurally, this is very straightforward — you wander around a dungeon finding treasure chests and occasionally getting into random battles. The characters in your party each have “dungeon abilities” that recharge over time that allow them to do different things — Neptune can smash through obstacles, for example, while Compa, a character who appears early on, can trigger tough battles at special summoning zones to temporarily lower the random encounter rate, and IF, another early character, has the ability to lead the way to normally-invisible treasure chests.
The battle system is turn-based, but makes use of an “ability points” system, whereby each character has a certain number of points that they can spend on their turn. Each move they do costs ability points, and up to four moves can be chained together into a combo. Certain moves allow the combo to continue registering with second, third, fourth sets of four button pushes, and the longer a combo goes on for, the better.
It’s this combo system that provides some rather daunting complexity to the battle system. You’re not limited to the basic skills the game provides for you. Rather, you can redefine pretty much any combination of four buttons to perform any of the character’s unlocked skills to create custom combos. Some skills are learned through levelling up, others through acquiring CD-Rs and CD-R/Ws with skill information on. CD-Rs have preset skills; CD-R/Ws have customizable skills that you can rename and visually tweak by importing an image from your PS3’s photo library. So yes, you can have a spell that summons, say, Twilight Sparkle to kick some ass. This is, as they say, awesome. And hilarious. It also gives people an actual reason to load some images into their PS3’s photo library, which is surely worthy of praise.
So thus far it seems like an interesting game, albeit one with more than a few flaws. On the technical front, the frame rate and graphics aren’t all that great (though the visual novel scenes look lovely and feature animated characters); the dungeons look like they might be a bit “samey” over time; and the game doesn’t do a great job of explaining its more complicated aspects in detail. But, for me anyway, part of the joy in this sort of thing is in discovering the hidden secrets for oneself and working out just what the fuck is going on.
It’s early days yet, but I’ve enjoyed what I’ve seen so far. Let’s see if it has what it takes to keep me playing in the long run!
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