Sword of Mana: Difference between revisions

From JJSWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (1 revision imported)
(→‎top: Categorization)
 
Line 1: Line 1:


This game seems to get a lot of shit, but for my money it's the best of the post-SNES [[Mana]] games.  The big thing is that from the action to the menu system, it just feels the most like them.  It doesn't try to completely change the game structure, or bring in a nonlinear story and map creation, or become a dungeon crawler like so many of the other games past 1995.  It feels like [[Final Fantasy Adventure]] and [[Legend of Mana]] had a baby, and it turned out like a too-verbose single-player SNES era game.
This game seems to get a lot of shit, but for my money it's the best of the post-SNES [[Mana]] games.  The big thing is that from the action to the menu system, it just feels the most like them.  It doesn't try to completely change the game structure, or bring in a nonlinear story and map creation, or become a dungeon crawler like so many of the other games past 1995.  It feels like [[Final Fantasy Adventure]] and [[Legend of Mana]] had a baby, and it turned out like a too-verbose single-player SNES era game.
[[Category:Video Games]]

Latest revision as of 15:08, 17 April 2023

This game seems to get a lot of shit, but for my money it's the best of the post-SNES Mana games.  The big thing is that from the action to the menu system, it just feels the most like them.  It doesn't try to completely change the game structure, or bring in a nonlinear story and map creation, or become a dungeon crawler like so many of the other games past 1995.  It feels like Final Fantasy Adventure and Legend of Mana had a baby, and it turned out like a too-verbose single-player SNES era game.