After going back and forth on whether or not I really felt like doing it, I’ve decided to go for a Platinum trophy on Tales of Xillia. As I wrote some time back, I’ve started thinking of trophies (though not so much Achievements, for some reason) as a means of showing my appreciation for a particularly good game. Working on the assumption that developers and publishers are looking at trophies and achievements as some sort of metric as much as they’re intended as a metagame for players, I’m happy to put in a bit of extra effort to show I liked the game enough to devour every bit of content it had to offer.
My hesitation with Tales of Xillia’s trophies is that although the game itself is excellent, the trophy list was rather uninspiring and distinctly grindy. A significant proportion of the trophies consist of “use [x] character’s [y] ability [z] times”, and there’s one frustratingly missable trophy that’s going to require a second playthrough to get. (Fortunately, I was intending on doing that anyway, since Tales of Xillia gives you the option to run through the story as one of two different main characters.)
What I’ve found in the course of going for some of these trophies, though, is that they’re slightly more enjoyable than they might have suggested. The most interesting thing about a lot of them is that they’re seemingly designed to give you a deeper appreciation of the battle system and how it works — sure, you can knock the difficulty down to Easy and basically hack-and-slash your way through, but go for some trophies and you’ll come to understand that each character handles noticeably differently, and has special abilities that are suited to various situations, many of which require actual skill to pull off. Jude, for example, has an ability called “Snap Pivot” where if you block and backstep at the right moment, you’ll zip around behind an enemy for some uninterrupted pummelling for a moment; performing the same move with Leia, meanwhile, causes her staff to extend, giving her a greater reach for a few moments.
The way the trophies help you understand the battle system extends beyond the ones where you have to actively trigger skills, though. Each character has a “link skill” that they perform when you’re not actively controlling them, but you partner them up with your active character. Achieving some of the trophies requires that you understand how, why and when these link skills are triggered: Jude heals you if you get knocked down (assuming he wasn’t knocked down as well); Leia steals from enemies if you knock them down, requiring you to figure out which skills are reliable knockdown providers; Rowen protects you from magic; Alvin breaks guards; and Milla can “bind” enemies.
I’ve still got a way to go yet — including a whole other playthrough, which hopefully shouldn’t take too long, given that I’m cleaning up as many of the time-consuming trophies as possible in the post-game section of my first run — but I’m still enjoying myself, and given how consistently good Xillia has been, I’m happy to show it my appreciation by striving for a Platinum.
Discover more from I'm Not Doctor Who
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.