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#Dragon Warrior VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past
freezenet · 5 months
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Review: Dragon Warrior VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past (Playstation)
In this review, we travel through time in the Playstation game Dragon Warrior VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past. We find out how well this RPG game plays. Continue reading Untitled
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astrogation · 13 years
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tags: video games: #~I
part 1: #~E
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Dragon Quest II: Luminaries of the Legendary Line
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legiongamerrd · 6 months
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#Gamefemerides
Hace 22 años se lanzó en América @dragonquest VII (Dragon Warrior VII). Es un RPG desarrollado por Heartbeat y アルテピアッツァ株式会社 (ArtePiazza), y publicado por Enix (@squareenixlatam ) para @playstation_la . El juego tuvo un remake para @nintendolatam 3DS, el 7 de febrero de 2013 en Japón, bajo el título Dragon Quest VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past, el cual salió en Occidente en 2016.
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“Finally. I’ve got Dave wrapped around my finger.”
-Sylvando, showing the others his engagement ring
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megatentious · 3 years
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Fragments of Forgotten Message Board Posts
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Dragon Quest wasn’t always my favorite RPG series (I have three favorite RPG series right now). But here is a short story with a couple of twists and turns about how it became my favorite; also, this story is my personal retrospective review of Dragon Quest 7.
My first memory of Dragon Quest, before it became the series that makes my heart feel full, was a short preview of Dragon Quest 6 from the EGM import corner. I must have known about Dragon WARRIOR much earlier than that (even though we never had a Nintendo I was sufficiently FF-enthused to know about the Big Rival to Final Fantasy) but memories work in funny ways and that’s the one I have. I remember the caption on the screenshot pointed out how impressive it was that there were so many items on the bookshelves. I remember thinking this game looked so incredible, and how if it was anywhere as good as “Final Fantasy III” that it was going to be a must play.
But how was I going to play it? The answer, in 1995, was to have a best friend who went to Asia every summer and brought back dozens of carts and CDs each time. One of those carts was Dragon Quest 6, and once I scooped out my Super Nintendo’s innards to allow myself the ability to play, I was treated to an evocative campfire and SNES strings and a dream-like atmosphere that was everything I’d hoped for. I could only manage to get through a few hours of it without any JP language skills, but that was more than enough to leave a lasting impression.
I know that Dragon Quest 6 is a weird answer to the question of the first Dragon Quest you played. I’m not one of the NES kids who started with Dragon Warrior, or any who started later with the ports on Gameboy Color, or anyone who started even later with the ports on DS or 8 on PS2 or 11. I began my affair with Dragon Quest with expectations that this series had top of the line production values, and so this may begin to explain the mindset with which I approached Dragon Quest 7.
DRAGON WARRIOR VII is a game I bought at launch on my six year old Playstation after years of waiting, ready to experience this storied series in English for the first time. I don’t know why I didn’t know about any of the GBC ports, but despite some trepidation at the environmental visuals I was excited to start. And for the first 40 hours or so, I had a wonderful time. The structure was so intriguing to me, the battle scaling so modest but compelling. However, by Hour 100 (this is a period of time in my life in which every RPG I played got finished no matter what) my attitude about the game and Dragon Quest in general reached the point where 10 years later I was still sufficiently … passionate enough to make message board posts like this:
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So the upshot here is that Dragon Quest 7 was a game that made me resent a series I was supposed to love, which in my mind made this game unforgivable. Months after making this post I would finally play Dragon Quest 5 on PS2 on my laptop and my love for the series would skyrocket further (one day I will write an essay about that perfect game and the lengths I went to more perfectly play it). And then one year after that they would announce a remake of DQ7 for Nintendo 3DS.
This announcement. Rather than do what everyone was expecting and churn out yet another DS-engine (which was based on the OG DQ7 engine!) “remake”, this was a full visual overhaul with 3D cutscene direction, maps for all dungeons, a fragment finder, and symphonic soundtrack. In other words, a remake that addressed virtually every complaint I had with my original DQ7 experience.
Time to briefly return to that original DQ7 experience. How to reflect on my memories of that playthrough? The memories I had when I made that angry post? The memories of making that angry post? The memories I have today? The truth about that experience is that I played DQ7 in the worst possible way you could play it. The game felt boring and repetitive to me in the back half because I marathoned it all at once over the course of a few weeks. The characters felt lifeless to me because I never actually used party chat (and party chat was more limited in the PSX version). The music began to grate on me because I wasn’t listening to dreamy Super Nintendo strings or more crucially, the full symphonic soundtrack I would later associate so strongly with so many of my personal Dragon Quest experiences. 
And what about those vignettes I called charmless and dull? Well, even by 2014 I was hedging on that, wondering in message board posts if the visual and sonic revamp with actual cutscene direction would allow these stories to leave more of an impact for me. The ultimate answer to my hypothesis was unequivocally, yes, these stories left more of an impact for me.
I’m never the one you’ll hear arguing against a game giving you friction (my other favorite RPG series is SaGa), but in this case all of the QOL smoothing in the remake, the fragment finder, the previous event summary, the in-game mapping, the tablet consolidation, all of this allows you the space to refocus your attention on the game’s most potent strengths. Rather than leaving you with a sensation of oppressively aimless retreading and a feeling of being lost (and not feeling lost in the good way, like many of my favorites in my other other favorite RPG series, which is the one this tumblr was supposed to be exclusively about) the smoothness of play lets you see the slowly unspooling world (love a psx rpg with a slowly unspooling world!!) not as a constellation of chores but for what it truly is.
That true and modest spirit of Dragon Quest, these warmly human fables that are meant to linger with you, that one line buried in party chat that is meant to devastate you, a nested series of stories that build and connect over time until you’re left marvelling at the genius of the construction. When I made that post in the past, I didn’t have any memories of the story of the noble priest of Vogograd and the truth that is left to a future generation of children to build. Is it 20 years of age and experience and memories that allowed for me to find that story so moving? Or was it the space the smoothing in this remake left for me to better understand the meaning of this game? 
I bought the DQ7 remake at launch five years after making that post, and I started and finished the DQ7 remake 5 years after buying it, which is, again, 20 years after I first finished it. How much time has to pass before you revisit the first Dragon Quest you ever finished, playing through the game you thought you hated, but maybe always suspected you could love? When do you allow yourself to return to old memories and then make new ones? 
Time hasn’t erased every one of DQ7’s problems, there is still some dungeon padding and some repetition, and there are also new problems with occasional localization issues and symbol encounter issues. But as with any game, you form memories of flaws and memories of strengths, and if you watch the credits and listen to the symphonic credits theme and search your heart and the memories of the flaws already seem distant, then you know you’ve just played a game that is a great. Dragon Quest 7 is a great game and a great Dragon Quest. You know you truly a cherish a series when you are willing to wait until it is the perfect time to play, and time after time, whether for DQ3, or DQ5, or DQ11, DQ is the series I cherish enough to wait for. 20 years after finishing was the time I needed to revisit DQ7, and closing this loop is the perfect gift I could give to myself.
In conclusion, Square Enix please announce HD 2D DQ4 ASAP for me thank you.
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suikosagas · 7 years
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I hate that in most Dragon Quest games, the only way to save is to go to a church. Not so much the whole Christianity thing, but the fact that you can't save on the world map. FYI, just lost about 4 hours of progress in Dragon Quest VII, because my 3DS froze in sleep mode. Shit like that makes me not want to play it, at all.
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fostersffff · 7 years
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For anyone who has played the Japanese version of Dragon Quest VII (or possibly even the original English translation on PSX): is Maribel supposed to be an unrepentant spoiled bitch or is she just supposed to be bad at expressing herself and come across like a bitch, and it was just lost in translation?
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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Dragon Quest Games Ranked
https://ift.tt/eA8V8J
Even if you’ve never played a Dragon Quest game, you’ve undoubtedly played other titles influenced by the series. Basic JRPG tropes like the overhead view, turn-based combat, and the medieval fantasy setting all got their start with the original Dragon Quest (then called Dragon Warrior in the West).
While many of these game design innovations are attributed to Final Fantasy, which was released in North America first, the Japanese release of Dragon Quest actually beat Final Fantasy by a full year at a time when Square and Enix were still separate companies. In fact, Final Fantasy probably wouldn’t exist if not for the massive success of Dragon Quest.
Since then, the series has seen plenty of ups and downs. While Dragon Quest has always been a huge hit in Japan, the original game sold so poorly in the U.S. that it was given away with subscriptions to Nintendo Power. Unsurprisingly, a couple of games in the long-running series took more than a decade to see English language releases. But with the most recent game receiving widespread critical acclaim, and even a nod in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, the series is finally getting the recognition it deserves around the world.
With 2021 marking the 35th anniversary of the first game’s release, there’s no better time rank the best and worst Dragon Quest games in the main series. Unfortunately, we could not include the Japan-only MMORPG Dragon Quest X in this ranking as its never been released in North America.
10. Dragon Quest II: Luminaries of the Legendary Line
1987
Dragon Quest II improved on the original in almost every way, but these days it’s more so viewed as a stepping stone for what the series would become rather than an essential entry. While the first game only allowed for 1v1 encounters, Luminaries of the Legendary Line introduced three-person parties, encounters with multiple enemies, and deeper combat options. 
But those innovations came at a cost, including nasty difficulty spikes and a high encounter rate. Add in a rather rote story about a prince saving the world, and there’s just not much here to justify a playthrough now, even if the many re-releases have slightly improved the gameplay. 
9. Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies
2009 
While well-received when it was released, time hasn’t been especially kind to Dragon Quest IX. It remains a high point in the series for allowing lots of customization for both the main character and party members, but that feature was tied to the game’s online capabilities, and Nintendo shut down its DS network years ago. If you try to play Dragon Quest IX now, you’re just not getting the full experience.
Square Enix has shown a strong willingness to remake and re-release Dragon Quest games over the years, and given that we’ve already seen remakes of the first eight games, it seems like it’s only a matter of time until we see Sentinels of the Starry Skies return in all of its customization glory.
8. Dragon Quest
1986
There’s a reason why so many indie RPGs are still built on the bones of this classic: the great grandfather of the JRPG genre holds up remarkably well 35 years after its initial release. Dragon Quest still has incredible charm and addictive gameplay, even if it isn’t the deepest title when compared to modern RPGs. 
With only five towns, five dungeons, and 1v1 battles, Dragon Quest is a simple and relatively quick playthrough by today’s standards, but it perfectly scratches that role-playing itch if you don’t have the energy to spend hours tweaking a character and planning strategies in a modern game. 
7. Dragon Quest VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past
2000
Arriving at the tail end of the PS1 era, Dragon Quest VII was in many ways a culmination of what many still consider to be the genre’s golden age. Opening on a small island that at first seems to be the only landmass left on the planet, Fragments of the Forgotten Past features one of the most interesting stories in the series, and the challenging gameplay mixed with the deep class system gives it plenty of legs. 
But Dragon Quest VII also suffers from a major Achilles’s heel: its monumental length. The game certainly straddles the line of what can be considered too long, with a single playthrough typically taking around 100 hours. You have to really, really like the sometimes meandering story and the gameplay to get through this installment. Still, if you have the time and patience to put into it, Fragments of the Forgotten Past delivers like few other RPGs. 
6. Dragon Quest III: The Seeds of Salvation
1988
Dragon Quest III is the first title in the series that really feels like a typical JRPG. It was the Dragon Quest game that introduced the ability to swap between multiple party members throughout the adventure, as well as quality of life improvements like quick item sorting and the ability to fill all HP with a menu command. 
Best of all, The Seeds of Salvation features a more fully fleshed out plot than the first two games. Yes, you’re still the legendary hero out to save the world, but this time when you think you’ve won, the “real” evil appears, and it turns out there’s a lot more game to play, a then-innovative plot twist that would become an RPG staple for years to come. 
5. Dragon Quest VI: Realms of Revelation
1995
Realms of Revelation is a really solid entry in the series that arrived way too late in the West to get its proper due. Originally released for the SNES in 1995 at the peak of its popularity, the big hook is switching between a “real world” full of typical medieval castles and villages, and a more surreal “dream world” made up of people’s dreams. There’s definitely a strong Link to the Past influence.
Unfortunately, Dragon Quest’s popularity was at a low point in North America at the time of its original release, and we only saw the excellent DS port of Dragon Quest VI in 2011. See? There is some hope we might see Dragon Quest X in other territories, it just might take another decade or so. 
4. Dragon Quest IV: Chapters of the Chosen
1990
For better or for worse, the Dragon Quest games are notorious for following a pretty strict formula of an unnamed hero gathering a party to venture forth and save the world. Dragon Quest IV was the first game in the series to change things up, and the results are still praised three decades later. Instead of starting off as a hero, the first four chapters see you playing as different party members, before finally meeting up with the protagonist in the fifth chapter. Then you save the world. Okay, so it’s not a huge departure from the other games in the series, but each chapter is really well written.  
Originally released in Japan and North America for the NES, Chapters of the Chosen was also remade for the PlayStation 1. The stateside release of that game was cancelled at the last minute, but a second DS remake featuring a brand new sixth chapter eventually saw a worldwide release in 2008.
3. Dragon Quest VIII: Journey of Cursed King
2004
Journey of the Cursed King is the first game in the Dragon Quest series to feature fully 3D graphics, although the classic gameplay didn’t change much. In fact, you still select attacks in first-person mode. But it does feature one of the better stories in any Dragon Quest game. This time, the nameless hero has to save the king, who has been turned into a troll, and the princess, who has been turned into a white horse. Great characters and the inclusion of voice acting elevate the game above most other Dragon Quest titles, and even most JRPGs of the era.
Thanks to the bright, cel-shaded graphics, Dragon Quest VIII has aged remarkably well for a PS2 game, but the 3DS port, with extra playable characters and new story scenes is arguably the definitive version at this point.
2. Dragon Quest V: Hand of the Heavenly Bride
1992
Dragon Quest V is still the pinnacle of storytelling for the franchise. The game starts with the birth of the hero, and then proceeds to follow him through the ups and downs of the next three decades of his life. For the first and only time in the series, you’re even joined on your quest by your two children. Hand of the Heavenly Bride delves into the life of its main character in a way that few other JRPGs ever have. Add in the ability to recruit monsters to your party for the first time, and you’ve got the recipe for a legendary adventure.
While Dragon Quest V was well-received in Japan, it arrived at a time when sales for the series were so poor in North America that Enix closed down its American office, so the SNES version was never officially localized. Thankfully, the DS remake finally saw a worldwide release in 2009. That version has gotten pricier in the last few years, but it’s well worth tracking down for any RPG fan.
1. Dragon Quest XI: Echoes of an Elusive Age
2017
Echoes an of an Elusive Age is everything that makes the Dragon Quest series great wrapped in a beautiful HD package. The turn-based combat offers more options than ever; the characters, from the magic-wielding sisters Veronica and Serena, to the flamboyant performer Sylvando, are among the most memorable in the entire series; and the story is incredibly deep and emotional. And just when you think you’re finished, a surprising bit of time travel opens up the final third of the game, which is actually its best act.
The original release of Dragon Quest XI would have topped this list, but with the extras added in the 2019 Definitive Edition, it’s going to be difficult for any future title in the series to approach its greatness. Square Enix also added the ability to play the entire game in a 2D mode similar to the Japan-exclusive 3DS version of the game. There are also secret missions that call back to all 10 previous games in the series. Echoes of an Elusive Age is the absolute pinnacle of the series, and easily one of the best RPGs of all time.
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spicynbachili1 · 5 years
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Nintendo’s Black Friday eShop sale is up for Switch and 3DS games
An opportunity to replenish on acclaimed indies
Many people are already set for Nintendo by now, however what about video games this Black Friday? The corporate’s annual Cyber Offers at the moment are in impact for the Swap eShop and the 3DS eShop with reductions on all the things from Skyrim to Snipperclips to Avenue Fighter 30th Anniversary Assortment.
The very best-case situation right here is half worth, so in case you’re accustomed to the flash gross sales on different consoles, you may be underwhelmed. Then once more, that is just about enterprise as ordinary for Nintendo.
My suggestions for Swap video games are Celeste ($15.99), Useless Cells ($19.99), and Undertale ($12.74) if any of these are nonetheless absent out of your library. You possibly can’t go mistaken. Snipperclips ($9.99) is a superb co-op expertise. Additionally, numerous people are massive into Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy ($25.99).
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Nintendo Swap eShop
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Celeste ($15.99)
Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy ($25.99)
Darkest Dungeon ($18.74)
Useless Cells ($19.99)
Disgaea 5 Full ($29.99)
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Dragon Ball FighterZ ($41.99)
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Undertale ($12.74)
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3DS eShop
Blast Grasp Zero ($four.99)
Bloodstained: Curse of the Moon ($6.99)
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Boxboy! ($2.49)
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These offers run till Wednesday, November 28 at eight:59am Pacific.
Nintendo eShop Cyber Offers [Nintendo]
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meimikana · 7 years
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Meimiday 2017 Wall of Awesome
GET HYPE!
January 28th is my birthday, dubbed Meimiday several years ago by my friends (I think it was hojo who started it). For those years, I would spend all day watching streams from said friends playing games for my birthday entertainment. Five years ago, however, when asked what I’d like to see I kinda just went “Why don’t you just beat some games?” and so the festivities truly began. Most of us frequent the Backloggery, so it’s kinda easy to see why it has snowballed~
MEIMIDAY 2017 HAS BEEN A RESOUNDING SUCCESS!
Neko :B: Picross 3D Round 2 :B: Final Fantasy X HD :B: Kingdom Hearts 2 Final Mix HD :B: Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep 0.2 -a fragmentary passage- :B: Kingdom Hearts Unchained [χ] Back Cover :B: flOw
John :B: SUPERHOT :B: Arslan: The Warriors of Legend :B: Far Cry 3 Blood Dragon :B: Fate/Extra (and :B: his PSP backlog with it!) :B: Raiden IV OverKill :B: Dungeons & Dragons: Shadow Over Mystara :B: Dungeons & Dragons: Tower of Doom :B: Freedom Planet :B: Resident Evil Revelations :B: Caladrius Blaze :B: Kingdom Hearts Birth By Sleep 0.2 -A fragmentary passage-
Hojo :C: Picross e7 :C: World of Final Fantasy :C: Hatsune Miku: Project Diva F 2nd :C: Tomba! :B: Contrast :C: Shantae and the Pirate's Curse :B: Cave Story+ :B: Gears of War 4 :B: New Super Luigi U :B: Tecmo Super Bowl
Lilith :B: Mother 2 Deluxe (Mother 2 hack) :B: Diablo :B: & :C: Spyro :M: Pokémon Pink (Pokemon Blue hack) :C: 3D Altered Beast :C: Super Mario Advance :B: Starfox 64 3D :B: Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (beta 8)
Bug :B: & :C: Kirby's Dreamland 2 :B: Final Fantasy XV :B: World of Final Fantasy
Cephi :B: Jetpac (Rare Replay) :B: Lunar Jetman (Rare Replay) :B: Atic Atac (Rare Replay) :B: Sabre Wulf (Rare Replay) :B: Underwurlde (Rare Replay) :B: Knight Lore (Rare Replay) :B: Gunfright (Rare Replay) :B: Slalom (Rare Replay) :B: R.C. Pro-Am (Rare Replay) :B: Cobra Triangle (Rare Replay) :B: Solar Jetman (Rare Replay) :B: Digger T. Rock (Rare Replay) :B: Battletoads (Rare Replay) :B: R.C. Pro-Am II (Rare Replay) :B: Battletoads Arcade (Rare Replay) :B: Killer Instinct Gold (Rare Replay) :B: Blast Corps (Rare Replay) :C: Banjo-Kazooie (Rare Replay) :B: Banjo-Tooie (Rare Replay) :B: Conker's Bad Fur Day (Rare Replay) :B: Grabbed by the Ghoulies (Rare Replay) :B: Shantae :B: Jetpac Refuelled (Rare Replay) :B: Perfect Dark Zero (Rare Replay) :B: Picross e7 :C: Picross 3D Round 2 :C: Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney − Spirit of Justice :B: Ori and the Blind Forest :B: Dungeons & Dragons: Shadow Over Mystara :B: Sonic the Fighters :B: Caladrius Blaze :B: DEAD OR ALIVE Xtreme 3 Fortune
iErebus :B: Resident Evil 6 :B: The Walking Dead: Michonne - Episode 2: Give No Shelter :B: The Walking Dead: Michonne - Episode 3: What We Deserve
Nai :B: Mighty Switch Force! Hyper Drive Edition :B: Mighty Switch Force! 2
Yutoma :C: Killing Floor 2 :C: Donkey Kong Country :C: Ape Escape
SaintTweeter :B: Senran Kagura: Estival Versus :B: Final Fantasy Type 0 :B: Infamous First Light :B: Xenoblade Chronicles X
ConsoleHandheld :B: Dragon Quest VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past (their 100th :B:/:C:!)
EIUPaladin :B: Final Fantasy XV :B: Broforce
ShadowStarEXE :C: DuckTales: Remastered :C: Shadow of the Colossus :C: Jak and Daxter: The Precursor Legacy :B: Spyro the Dragon :B: River City Ransom
PaperLink :C: Kirby Super Star (with soaring_wings)
soaring_wings :C: Kirby Super Star (with PaperLink)
Domo :B: Final Fantasy IX
eski514 :B: Golden Sun :B: Mass Effect :B: Mario Kart: Super Circuit :B: Contra :B: Sam and Max 106: Bright Side of the Moon
Sobou :B: SteamWorld Dig :B: Curse of the Crescent Isle DX :B: Inexistence :B: Odallus: The Dark Call :C: WarCraft II Tides of Darkness :C: Thomas Was Alone :C: The Legend of the Mystical Ninja :B: Final Fantasy I :B: Expendabros :B: Supercharged Robot VULKAISER
Dia :C: Code: Realize ~Guardian of Rebirth~ :C: Norn9: Var Commons :B: Tales of Phantasia :B: Tales of Symphonia :B: Gravity Rush
Ginger :C: Code: Realize ~Guardian of Rebirth~ :B: God of War III :B: Final Fantasy XIII-2
JellySoup :C: Human Resource Management :C: Freebie
Crimson Neko :B: American McGee's Alice
Orbo :B: Kingdom Hearts: Dream Drop Distance :B: Kingdom Hearts 0.2 Birth By Sleep - A Fragmentary Passage
Alienjesus :B: & :C: Paper Mario
Maeryn :B: Final Fantasy X HD
Drumble :B: Tetris Battle Gaiden
Ayaikun :B: Nier
Moomba :C: Another World :B: Flower :B: Gal Gunvolt
Altrius :B: Halo Wars: Definitive Edition
gaiages :B: Crypt of the Necrodancer
fireemblemlord :B: Blazblue:Calamity Trigger
Walu :B: Parodius Da! Shinwa kara Owarai e :B: & :C: Bump 'n' Jump :B: & :C: Adventure Island 3
Try4ce :B: Resident Evil 7 :B: Road Avenger :B: Kirby no Kirakira Kizzu
Slythex :B: Danganronpa Another Episode: Ultra Despair Girls
Lyndis :C: Journey
Honorable Mention: Hojo :C: Metal Storm (Moana was calling, so he had to break for movie time.)
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legiongamerrd · 2 years
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#Gamefemerides Hace 21 años se lanzó en América @dragonquest VII (Dragon Warrior VII). Es un RPG desarrollado por Heartbeat, y publicado por Enix (@squareenixlatam ) para PlayStation. El juego tuvo un remake para Nintendo 3DS, el 7 de febrero de 2013 en Japón, bajo el título Dragon Quest VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past, el cual salió en Occidente en 2016. Es la 7ma entrega de la serie Dragon Quest, y es el sucesor de Dragon Quest VI de 1995 para Super Famicom. Un éxito inmediato en su lanzamiento, con 4.06MM para abril de 2001, haciéndole el juego de PS1 mejor vendido en Japón. Fue el primer juego de la serie en lanzarse en América, desde 1992, con Dragon Quest IV siendo el último. #LegionGamerRD #ElGamingnosune #Videojuegos #Gaming #RetroGaming #RetroGamer #CulturaGaming #CulturaGamer #GamingHistory #HistoriaGaming #GamerDominicano #GamingPodcast #Podcast #Heartbeat #Enix #SquareEnix #DragonQuestVII #DQ7 #DragonQuest #PlayStation #PlayStation1 #PS1 #Nintendo #Nintendo3DS #3DS #JRPG #RPG https://www.instagram.com/p/CkYM5H3Bpfk/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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7: Do you know what I just realized?
Maribel: That some thoughts are better left unexpressed?
7: Nice try.
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oo3helcacn · 7 years
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2016 in Retrospect
With 2016 over let’s look back at all the games I played... which was a lot!  This year was actually a big year for gaming for me because I bought a laptop and opened up a whole new world of PC gaming!  ...OK let’s be honest, it’s a visual novel machine but I don’t regret it for a minute!  Morgan actually gave me this idea.  This is a summary of all the games I played in 2016.  Last year at this time I made a New Year’s Resolution to pick up this again and stay with it.  Here’s to another year of lot’s of great games!!
2016 Game of the Year (My favorite game that came out this year):
Dragon Quest Builders (PS4/Vita)
Favorite Games (Just some of my favorites for each console that I played this year):
[Ace Attorney] Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney (3DS)
Bloodborne (PS4)
Corpse Party (PSP)
Dandelion Wishes Brought to You (PC)
Dragon Quest VIII Journey of the Cursed King (PS2)
The Legend of Heroes Trails of Cold Steel (Vita)
Lollipop Chainsaw (PS3)
Mario Kart 8 (Wii U)
Minecraft (Xbox One)
Mystic Messenger (Mobile)
Pokémon LeafGreen Version (GBA)
[Zero Escape] Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors (DS)
Least Favorite Game:
[Zero Escape] Zero Time Dilemma (Vita)
Most Entries Logged:
Mystic Messenger (Mobile) - 163 days played
Platinums:
Assassin’s Creed II (PS3) - January 8th, 12:00 AM
Resident Evil 5 (PS3) - February 16th, 5:05 PM
Resident Evil 6 (PS3) - March 11th, 4:30 PM
Mind Zero (Vita) - May 1st, 1:45 AM
Norn9 Var Commons (Vita) - July 24th, 3:48 AM
[Zero Escape] Virtue’s Last Reward (Vita) - August 15th, 11:19 PM
Infamous Second Son (PS4) - September 18th, 9:56 PM
Bloodborne (PS4) - November 7th, 3:02 PM
Ray Gigant (Vita) - November 21st, 3:12 AM
Games Beaten (for the first time):
[Ace Attorney] Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney (3DS)
[Ace Attorney] Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney Justice for All (3DS)
[Ace Attorney] Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney Trials and Tribulations (3DS)
Assassin’s Creed II (PS3)
Be Reasonable (PC)
Bloodborne (PS4)
Dandelion Wishes Brought to You (PC)
Enzai Falsely Accused (PC)
Infamous Second Son (PS4)
Mind Zero (Vita)
Mystic Messenger (Mobile)
Nameless The One Thing You Must Recall (PC)
Norn9 Var Commons (Vita)
OMGWTFOTL (PC)
Ray Gigant (Vita)
Sweet Fuse At Your Side (PSP)
Sweet Pool (PC)
Uncharted Drake’s Fortune (PS4)
[Zero Escape] Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors (DS)
[Zero Escape] Virtue’s Last Reward (Vita)
Games Played:
Absolute Obedience (PC)
[Ace Attorney] Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney (3DS)
[Ace Attorney] Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney Justice for All (3DS)
[Ace Attorney] Phoenix Wright Ace  Attorney Trials and Tribulations (3DS)
Amnesia The Dark Descent (PC)
Animal Crossing Happy Home Designer (3DS)
Animal Crossing New Leaf (3DS)
Arslan The Warriors of Legend (PS4)
Assassin’s Creed II (PS3)
Be Reasonable (PC)
Bloodborne (PS4)
Corpse Party (PSP)
Dandelion Wishes Brought to You (PC)
Dragon Quest Builders (PS4/Vita)
Dragon Quest VII Fragments of the Forgotten Past (3DS)
Dragon Quest VIII Journey of the Cursed King (PS2)
Dramatical Murder (PC)
Dramatical Murder re:code (Vita)
Enzai Falsely Accused (PC)
Flow (PS3)
Full Service (PC)
Grand Theft Auto V (PS3)
Hatoful Boyfriend Holiday Star (Vita/PS4)
Infamous Second Son (PS4)
The Legend of Heroes Trails of Cold Steel (Vita)
The Legend of Zelda Majora's Mask 3D (3DS)
Lollipop Chainsaw (PS3)
Mario Kart 8 (Wii U)
Mind Zero (Vita)
Minecraft (360/Xbox One)
Mortal Kombat X (PS4)
Mystic Messenger (Mobile)
Nameless The One Thing You Must Recall (PC)
NekoBuro Cats Block (Vita)
Nier Automata (PS4)
Nioh (PS4)
Norn9 Var Commons (Vita)
OMGWTFOTL (PC)
Outlast (PS4)
Outlast 2 (PS4)
Pokemon LeafGreen Version (GBA)
Pokemon Moon (3DS)
Pokemon Red Version (3DS)
Pokemon Sun (3DS)
Pokemon Y (3DS)
Ray Gigant (Vita)
Resident Evil 5 (PS3)
Resident Evil 6 (PS3)
Resident Evil 7 (PS4)
The Sims 3 (PC)
Song of the Deep (PS4)
Spore (PC)
StreetPass Mii Plaza (3DS)
Sweet Fuse At Your Side (PSP)
Sweet Pool (PC)
Uncharted Drake’s Fortune (PS4)
The Urbz Sims in the City (DS)
World End Economica (PC)
Worms Revolution (PS3)
[Zero Escape] Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors (DS)
[Zero Escape] Virtue’s Last Reward (Vita)
[Zero Escape] Zero Time Dilemma 
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fostersffff · 7 years
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Huh. It sure is weird that Aishe, the chosen dancer of the Roamers, descended from a former chosen dancer of the Roamers and her guardian (who is said to have been a prince from a distant kingdom) who is rebelling as hard as she can against her lot in life, much like her ancestor (who is said to have also been a rebel himself) looks so much like Kiefer that a guard and the princess of Estard both make a comment about it, with the former even mistaking her for Kiefer directly.
I wonder if that means anything…………………………………………
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Mia: Are you actually gonna throw away all your convictions for a chance to get laid?
Erik: I don‘t really have any convictions.
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legiongamerrd · 3 years
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#Gamefemerides Hace 20 años se lanzó en América @dragonquest VII (Dragon Warrior VII). Es un RPG desarrollado por Heartbeat y アルテピアッツァ株式会社(ArtePiazza), y publicado por Enix (@squareenixusa ) para @playstation . El juego tuvo un remake para @nintendo 3DS, el 7 de febrero de 2013 en Japón, bajo el título Dragon Quest VII: Fragments of the Forgotten Past, el cual salió en Occidente en 2016. Es la 7ma entrega de la serie Dragon Quest, y es el sucesor de Dragon Quest VI de 1995 para Super Famicom. Un éxito inmediato en su lanzamiento, con 4.06MM para abril de 2001, haciéndole el juego de PS1 mejor vendido en Japón. Fue el primer juego de la serie en lanzarse en América, desde 1992, con Dragon Quest IV siendo el último. También fue el último juego con el título Dragon Warrior en América. El juego fue producido por Yuji Horii, quien ha presidido la serie desde su creación. El trabajo de arte y el diseño de los personajes, como siempre, Akira Toriyama, creador de Dragon Ball Z, y el artista responsable de todos los Dragon Quest. El juego sigue al héroe junto a sus amigos mientras descubre secretos sobre islas misteriosas que rodean su hogar, Estard. A través de algunas ruinas antiguas, son transportados al pasado de varias islas, y deben vencer el mal en cada nueva locación. Las mecánicas de juego se mantienen sin muchos cambios de los anteriores, aunque un sistema de clases extensivo permite a los jugadores a personalizar a cada miembro de su party. #LegionGamerRD #ElGamingnosune #Videojuegos #Gaming #RetroGaming #RetroGamer #CulturaGaming #CulturaGamer #GamingHistory #HistoriaGaming #GamerDominicano #GamingPodcast #Podcast #Heartbeat #Enix #SquareEnix #DragonQuestVII #DQ7 #DragonQuest #PlayStation #PlayStation1 #PS1 #Nintendo #Nintendo3DS #3DS #JRPG #RPG https://www.instagram.com/p/CVsb_rarceM/?utm_medium=tumblr
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