1376: Turnabout Weekend

I am glad this week is over. Really glad. It’s not been a great one.

Granted, pretty much all of the “bad things” that have happened have actually happened to Andie rather than me — she’s the one who got ill, then her phone broke, just to add insult to injury — but what with me being somewhat of the anxious persuasion, all this has had a bit of an effect on me too.

Still, pretty sure the worst of everything is over and done with now, which means we can hopefully enjoy a quiet, peaceful weekend and get back to some semblance of normality next week. Andie’s not yet sure if she’s going back to work next week or not, but that’s up to her, not me, of course.

So what am I up to? Well, I spent a chunk of this evening playing Hyperdimension Neptunia Victory and finally cleared the enormous backlog of sidequests I’d built up, leading me to achieve a “perfect 40” rating for a chapter, which is what I was really after. Helpfully, chasing all these sidequests has equipped me with some powerful items and levelled my characters up to “comfortably overpowered” status, so the remainder of the story should be reasonably straightforward — though, of course, there will be plenty more sidequests to do along the way, too.

I also downloaded Ace Attorney: Dual Destinies (aka Ace Attorney 5) yesterday, and am already in love with it. Those who know me well will know that the Ace Attorney series is one of those few series that, like Neptunia, I will immediately purchase a new installment of without question and without reading reviews. I’m only partway into the game’s first chapter so far, but it’s already impressive stuff.

The DS versions of the Ace Attorney series were actually enhanced ports of Game Boy Advance games, and thus were rather technologically limited. It wasn’t until brand new content was added in the fifth case of the first game, the fourth game in the main series and the Ace Attorney Investigations spinoff came out that we started to see some slight variations on the formula — better use of the touchscreen, for example, along with objects that could be examined in 3D.

Ace Attorney 5 is a bit of a milestone for the series, then, in that it’s the first installment to be specifically built for the platform it’s on rather than based on old code and assets. And it shows.

I was a little worried when I heard that Capcom was making the shift to 3D characters and environments — the 2D artwork of the original games was always charming and full of character, and I was concerned that the move to 3D would lose some of this. Thankfully, it hasn’t; the 3D characters are cel-shaded and look convincingly like much better-animated versions of their 2D counterparts, with a few tweaks here and there. Phoenix Wright looks noticeably older, for example, but this makes sense — by this point, he’s a veteran defense lawyer, not the frantically sweating rookie he was in the first game.

The 3D aspect also allows for more dramatic, cinematic presentation; occasionally, in the old games, the view would switch to an overview of the courtroom while the peanut gallery would mumble about something that had just been said. Now, rather than this being a static image, it’s a dynamic pan across the courtroom that looks much cooler. It’s a small touch, but it’s neat.

There’s anime sequences, too, to depict things that don’t really work with just the usual visual novel-style narration. This also means that characters have a voice; I’m pretty sure Wright is voiced by the same guy who did Jude in Tales of Xillia, which will continue to prove distracting until I find out for sure.

In fact, let me research that right now.

………

Yes, he is. Here’s proof. Well, that answers that. So long as Wright doesn’t start coming out with things like “I wish we didn’t have to fight, but we must!” I think we’ll probably be all good.

Oh, yeah. You should buy Ace Attorney: Dual Destinies. I’m sure there will be more enthusing about it in the very near future. Now I’m off to play Ace Attorney: Dual Destinies and flip the bird to this week. Mata ne.


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