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Meteo Xavier's Top 10 Games to Take on the Road The Earth is
big. Really big. Even bigger than we originally thought a couple of years
ago—and it takes a LONG time to get around it. Traveling means
you'll have a lot of time on your hands, whether you're in a car going
cross-country to Mallard, Iowa because your dad is a cheap bastard who
can't take a plane because turning on a Game Boy in flight will blow up
the engines, or you're in the ho(s)tel watching nothing on the
optional TV, or you ran out of conversation with your grandma five
minutes before you walked in the door. Videogames are a great way to
pass the hours upon days of time that will be wasted one way or
another. 10. Final Fantasy Legend III (GB): By now, most of us know that the Final Fantasy games for the original Game Boy are only Final Fantasy in title—this, along with Legend and Legend II, actually belongs to the SaGa franchise—and yet, of all three of these bastard children of localization, this one resembles Final Fantasy the most (but it's more like a Dragon Quest, to me).
It has a simple and solid
approach. You don't have to think about 10-12 different
things to level up; you just buy equipment and spells and level up with
experience points to get further along. The "gimmick" to this game is
that you can have your characters turn into monsters or robots for
customization purposes based on whatever meat or parts enemies leave
behind. The battle system is so simple I don't even have to explain
it. The story, while minimal, is kinda interesting in that your basic
goal is to travel back and forth in time looking for parts to restore
this super airship so you can stop floods (and everyone else) from
destroying the world. VERY small world map, but a good number of
places to explore. Easy fights but difficult boss battles make up the
challenge portion of this game.
What I like the most about
this game, as opposed to a monster like Final Fantasy Tactics, is that
you don't have to get drowned in battle scenes. You get into some huge
gang fights, but it's not a complicated mess of frustration and
confusion. It's much more efficient and manageable than many other strats without sacrificing the main draw—watching dozens of knights
and elfs and goblins beating each other silly until there's nothing
left. It's still fun.
Well, it's not A Link to the Past, but
Capcom did its DAMNEDEST to pull it off, and the effort shows. Two
worlds intertwined as one? Check. Wise-cracking omnipresent sidekick?
Check. Fan-service? Check. Classic tunes remix? Check. Crazy-ass boss
fights that have you working the guy for two minutes before you can
get an opening? Checkmate.
First thing, it
gets rid of the old eight character ring and instead puts you on a small
series of pathways to reach the end level. (To be honest, I'm not
really sure why they did this, but it does seem to make a difference.)
As the title suggests, you get to play as either Mega Man or Bass,
different 'bots who try the same levels with different results. The
level designs are some of the most creative since 2. You've got screens
of randomly generating enemies trying to hit you as you avoid falling
to your death, lightning fast bamboo shoots hitting you from every
which way, Simon Says, this crazy-ass thing where you have to shoot
the right number of pillars to get through a room without a spike rack
giving you a high colonic for the ages....
Ruins of Lore shows a lot of
promise in that it has a surprising range to it and breaks away some
of the monotony of the old Lufia games—which amounted to chasing Sinistrals around the world from town to dungeon or cave or shrine or
tower. This has some really cool dungeons and individual story points
and events. No more overworld. You gain a lot more abilities than you
used to thanks to a "class system" that was added in for some reason—it works, but it's really unnecessary, just like the
Pokémon thing they
put in, too. Yep, you're playing
Final Fantasy I,
Pokémon, and Lufia in
one game, at the same time. Apart from that, this game is a mess. The
graphics are questionable, the experience system is literally broken,
and, for
some reason, when enemies bite or tackle you, they shoot
fireballs instead. The puzzles are here but in much less veracity than
Lufia II.
For one reason, I could
probably find it more easily and cheaply than the other one. Second reason
is the overall setting and plot revolving around an abandoned space
station and the "X" parasites and evidently your own evil twin.
Granted, we have done the evil twin thing to the point of genocide,
but I found this one more intriguing—you're basically fighting
yourself at your peak while you're still recovering from a major
surgery (and, thus, unable to use all your weapons at the start of the
game), and it makes for some really good action. The game itself does a
remarkable job of recreating the Super Metroid experience, but, as you
should expect by now, it doesn't have the depth or reach of Super Metroid. The
linearity and lack of unlockables holds it back. You could
beat this mutha in about 10 hours—making it perfect backseat
entertainment on your way to or back from anything.
Controlling two people in Dracula's castle works REALLY well and adds
more dimensions to a tired genre. You're also no longer confined to
the castle this time; you get to travel to some kick-ass locations
(like a gravity-defying circus in what I'm guessing is London during
the blitz, and a pyramid). You get to meet the ghost of an old
Castlevania protagonist who will send you on a bunch of quests for
rewards and get your ass kicked in some pretty tough and creative boss
fights.
Anyway, Pokémon (any of them—I just chose Red
for its convenience) is the perfect portable gaming item, and you won't
even remember being in the car or plane or train or boat or whatever
with this by your side. Hundreds of monsters you have to fight with and
fight as, catching them and using them in a variety of ways,
God-only-knows how many skills and abilities and strengths and
weaknesses and strategies to employ to get through, and add in a system
that lets you connect with someone else and battle them and you've
basically found a legal way to print money. -- Meteo Xavier {01-2008} Rate this article — |
| Hey, you. Got a top 10 list in you? Perhaps your Top 10 Videogames of All Time? Or, perhaps, your Top 10 Games from the 90s? Or even your Top 10 Super Nintendo Games that Don't Begin with "Super"? Write it up and e-mail it to this. |