1528: Oi, Hyakkihei

Now I’ve actually written my review for it over on USgamer, I can talk a little more about The Witch and the Hundred Knight, the game I’ve been playing most recently.

I wasn’t quite sure what to make of it initially. It’s one of those games where there was a fair amount of negative buzz surrounding it quite early on, led by an early review from IGN that wasn’t altogether kind. But if my experiences with Time and Eternity were anything to go by, I knew very well that “popular” opinion was something I was unlikely to mesh with, and thus I went in to The Witch and the Hundred Knight with an open mind.

I was very pleasantly surprised. What we have here is a very unconventional Japanese RPG in every respect. It’s not turn-based, it’s not party-based, it’s not overly moe or ecchi, it’s not a comedy. Instead, it’s an action RPG with a surprisingly dark, deep storyline, and one of the most interesting main characters I’ve had the pleasure to hang out with virtually in quite some time.

Metallia, the eponymous Witch, is a horrible person. Or at least she initially puts herself across as one. She’s foul-mouthed, she’s quick to anger and she’s aggressive. She appears to have no qualms about inflicting bloody revenge on those she feels to have wronged her, and she seems utterly miserable and bitter about everything.

Over the course of the game, we learn about her. We get to see her gradually letting new people into her life, and starting to seemingly trust them. We get some hints about where all that bitterness and rage has come from. And, quite early on, we also learn that Metallia is not long for this world — though not why immediately.

We observe all this through the eyes of the Hundred Knight, a supposedly mythical figure that Metallia summons at the outset of the game to do her bidding. The Hundred Knight is the player avatar, though, so you have a certain degree of autonomy from Metallia’s wishes, and indeed can express your opinions non-verbally at various points throughout the game. You’re still bound to Metallia, so progress in the overall plot is largely determined by eventually fulfilling her wishes of destroying the “Pillars of Temperance” and spreading her swamp around the world, but between those predictable story beats, the Hundred Knight gets involved in a number of distinct adventures, each of which forms itself into a neatly contained episode of the overall narrative.

A particularly effective episode is the seventh chapter in the game. I won’t spoil the details for those who are planning on playing the game for themselves, but suffice to say that it tells a complete, surprising and interesting self-contained story with a surprisingly emotional payoff. It explores both Metallia and the other members of the cast who have joined by this point, and blends both humour and pathos to a surprisingly effective degree.

The pathos aspect is what I think I’ve found most surprising about The Witch and the Hundred Knight so far. Developer Nippon Ichi is typically known for relatively light-hearted fare, though in some cases (ZHP is a good example) there’s often a more thought-provoking core underneath the exterior fluff. The Witch and the Hundred Knight is, I think, the first Nippon Ichi game where the “dark” aspect has been very much pushed to the forefront, with any comedic moments being somewhat incidental rather than the other way around. The narrative is bleak and, at times, genuinely sad without resorting to being overly “gritty”. It’s a stark contrast to what I wrote about a short while ago with regard to triple-A games; compared to Thief, which wants desperately to be treated as an 18-rated movie, The Witch and the Hundred Knight never feels like it’s trying too hard and, consequently, ends up coming across as far more genuinely mature than Thief ever did despite being considerably more colourful and stuffed full of stylised, bizarre characters.

Anyway. As I noted in my review for The Witch and the Hundred Knight, I’m sure not everyone will be into the particularly abrasive personality of Metallia and her adventures, but if you’re after an interesting action RPG with a compelling, unusual story and some satisfying, challenging game systems, you could certainly do far worse, so check it out if you have the chance.


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