1492: The Alchemist of Arland, Reprise

I’ve been enjoying Atelier Rorona for the past few days, so I thought I’d talk a little about what I like about it. I know that Atelier Rorona isn’t the best of the three …of Arland games on PS3, but my completionist nature (from a narrative perspective, anyway) insists that I play it thoroughly first before moving on to the supposedly superior Atelier Totori and Atelier Meruru. And while I was originally intending to wait for the revamped version of Atelier Rorona before I played it, there’s still no confirmation one way or the other of whether it’s coming to the West. I’ll be surprised if it doesn’t, but either way, I decided I couldn’t wait any longer. I started playing it a while back — June of last year, in fact — but only got about ten hours in due to a combination of Hyperdimension Neptunia Victory, Time and Eternity and Tales of Xillia. Now, no more interruptions!

So what the hell is Atelier Rorona and why should you care? Well, it’s… I guess it’s an RPG? It certainly has all the trappings of a typical RPG — hit points, experience points, levels, skills — but it’s not at all your usual “band of plucky heroes saves the world” affair. No, instead it’s a rather smaller-scale affair in which you play a young girl called Rorona who is tasked with saving the alchemy workshop in which she works by fulfilling a series of increasingly unreasonable requests. These all come from Meredith Alcock, the head of the Ministry of Arland, who is keen to stamp out alchemy in favour of industrialisation for his own, presumably greedy reasons. Failure to meet the requirements of the assignments brings your game to a premature end; successfully completing them means you’re immediately presented with another one until you reach the conclusion of the game.

Amid all these assignments are numerous visual novel-style narrative paths that are woven throughout the course of the game, and which you can advance by improving your relationships with various characters by performing additional tasks for them. There are numerous endings to the game, and it’s designed to be replayed several times. I haven’t yet decided if I’m going to attempt to play as much of Rorona as possible before moving on to Totori, or if I’m going to cycle around Rorona, Totori and Meruru several times in sequence. Either way, I’m presently enjoying the experience enough to want to try and see as many of the endings as possible.

It’s not necessarily the narrative that is the biggest draw in Atelier Rorona though. No, this being a Gust game, the emphasis is very much on an in-depth crafting system, which is excellent yet enjoyably distinct from that seen in Atelier’s stablemate Ar Tonelico. In Ar Tonelico, crafting was a means of seeing various interactions between the characters and getting to know them a little better — plus getting some great items out of the experience in the process. In Atelier, meanwhile, the crafting system is the core of the game: it’s the way you complete most of the assignments in the game, and the solution to most of the quests you’re presented with to earn money or improve your relationship with other characters.

The reason it’s so interesting is because it’s a lot deeper than simpler systems seen in other games that require you to do nothing more than combine specific items to get a brand new item. In Atelier Rorona, you have to take the quality of your ingredients into account — and things like organic ingredients spoil over time — as well as the various “traits” they have attached to them. In many cases, these are nothing more than flavour — if you make a metal ingot that is “stinky” it doesn’t affect the stats of any items you subsequently create using it, for example — but in others you can do things like boost the base effect of a healing or attack item, improve the stats on equipment and improve its quality beyond that which its component items would normally provide.

There’s a lot of number-crunching involved to optimise your alchemy, and you can’t always count on having perfect ingredients available, so sometimes you’ll have to improvise somewhat. The ability to do this is reflected by some ingredient items for recipes being a generic category rather than a specific item. For example, when making a “Spring Cup” item that contains liquid, the exact liquid you put in there is up to you — it could be water, it could be tree sap, or something altogether more unpleasant. The items you choose to put in there will affect the final quality of the item, and experimentation is often very rewarding.

Key to doing well in Atelier Rorona is managing your time effectively, because everything you do causes the in-game clock to tick away, counting down towards each new deadline. Whether you’re crafting something or going out into the field to gather ingredients and fight monsters, everything takes time, so if you want to optimise how you’re playing the game — which is presumably important when going for some of the endings — you’ll need to plan your time well. Probably better than I’m doing right now, but I’m fine with just seeing which ending I get first time, then specifically attempting to pursue one or more of the others on a subsequent playthrough.

If the other two …of Arland games are as enjoyable as Atelier Rorona I can see myself spending a hefty amount of time on this series. It helps that Rorona has an amazing soundtrack — I shouldn’t expect anything less from Gust after Ar Tonelico’s magnificence in that regard — but the gameplay is rock-solid too. I’m looking forward to crafting a whole bunch more pies, bombs and mysterious liquids over the next few weeks, and I don’t doubt I’ll report further on my progress as I continue.


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