2336: From the Shores of Felghana

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I started Ys: The Oath in Felghana today after finishing the main story of Ys Origin. (I do intend to go back and replay Origin on the harder difficulties as well as grind through its extra modes and unlockables, but that will be a gradual process!) So far I’ve played about two hours or so into the main story, beaten four bosses and yelled more curse words at a game than I can remember doing for a very long time.

Oath in Felghana is hard. Really hard. Like, really really hard. I did not know this going in, so feeling quite confident off the back of clearing Ys Origin (which was challenging, but not mega-hard) I thought I’d start Oath on Hard rather than Normal.

I started to think that I had maybe made the wrong decision when the first boss took me a good ten attempts. When the second one took me probably twenty or thirty tries — including having to stop after a few attempts because I was getting pretty wound up by the whole thing — I seriously considered restarting on Normal or Easy, but my pride prevented me from doing so.

Then I beat that boss, and I remembered what I had discovered during my first runthrough of Ys Origin. Ys games, so far as I can tell, are not games intended to be breezed through without any resistance whatsoever. They’re short, yes, but whenever their diminutive length is quoted, it isn’t taking into account all the times you’ll have to retry the difficult bits. Because you’ll have to retry the difficult bits a lot. In other words, Ys Origin and Oath in Felghana may well be “10 hours long”, but that figure assumes that you’ll beat all the bosses first time and won’t make any stupid mistakes while exploring lava-covered ruins. And I can assure you that you won’t beat all the bosses first time, and you most certainly will make stupid mistakes while exploring lava-covered ruins.

This difficulty makes it all the more satisfying, though. There’s a feeling of genuine “release” when you finally overcome a difficult challenge, and much like Ys Origin, I’ve found that while the bosses in particular are difficult, you’ll almost certainly find yourself getting a little bit further each and every time you try, rather than stagnating with absolutely no idea whatsoever what to do. Oath, like Origin, is so well designed that it manages to “train” you how to beat its bosses without giving you any explicit instructions. The animation and sound cues, the attack patterns, the overall “rhythm” of the encounters — all of them are carefully tuned to make each encounter surprisingly intuitive, and while many of them aren’t especially complicated in terms of mechanics, you’ll need to practice in order to perform what the game is asking of you flawlessly. And you will need to be as close to flawless as possible, because Oath in particular is very unforgiving.

It’s funny. The Souls series kicking my ass and forcing me to learn encounters is one of the things that ended up putting me off it, but I’m really enjoying it in the Ys series. This leads me to believe that it’s perhaps not this actual style of game that puts me off, but the aesthetic; Ys is colourful, cheerful and energetic, while Souls is dark, dreary and depressing. While there’s a time and place for dark, dreary and depressing, I tend to prefer that sort of thing in my survival horrors and adventure games; when I’m RPGing, I want to be heroic in a colourful fantasy land filled with pretty girls. And Oath in Felghana is certainly delivering on all fronts so far.