Posts: 1,901
Threads: 164
Joined: Sep 2006
04-25-2008, 01:22 AM
(This post was last modified: 04-25-2008, 01:22 AM by Twin-Skies.)
Strangely addicting.
The dual-screen combat mode's challenging, given you're controlling two characters at the same time.
Top screen works with the directional pad, bottom screen works with the stylus.
Posts: 3,394
Threads: 21
Joined: Oct 2007
Got a link to screenshots of this game?
Posts: 1,901
Threads: 164
Joined: Sep 2006
Not yet - having trouble trying to upload to photobucket lately.
Posts: 3,617
Threads: 122
Joined: Jun 2007
05-19-2008, 04:25 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-19-2008, 04:26 PM by Sforza.)
Wired has a nice commentary article on the game.
You can
read it here.
Sometimes, a game is so ridiculously complicated it just begs you to throw it away.
That's how I felt after an hour of playing The World Ends With You, the hot new role-playing game for the Nintendo DS. In TWEWY, you're a classic Square Enix hero: a surly teenager who comes complete with mysterious secrets, a broken emotional life and spiky anime hair. Everyone gasps in astonishment a lot, and you're thrust unwillingly into a cosmic conflict with creepy monsters.
It's the "conflict" part that drove me crazy. TWEWY offers a combat system that is incredibly innovative and brilliant -- but also impossibly, annoyingly convoluted. It defied me to hurl my DS against the wall. etc etc...
(no, I don't have a DS and I'm not planning on getting one. Wii, maybe. For MH3)
Posts: 7,110
Threads: 210
Joined: Aug 2006
Steam: Grimlo9ic
Epic: Grimlo9ic
Battle.net: Grim#16773
That's just the beginning though, Wired finishes up the opening with:
Quote:And yet I didn't. I actually wound up loving the game. And therein lies a very interesting lesson, which suggests that even in our age of superaccessible, EZ-games like Wii Sports and Guitar Hero and Bejeweled, there are rich delights to be had in videogames that are more complicated than a moon landing.
On a sidenote, I've noticed that a lot of the major game companies like Capcom and Square-Enix are hitting sites like DeviantArt with thousands of dollars worth of publicity through art contests and such. It's a little too early to say anything definite at this point, but are companies actually looking at the fans for some ideas to incorporate into their games now? I mean, they've done this before, but not on something as obvious as
this.