A few days ago, I bought Tales of the Abyss for the 3DS. I was a bit hesitant to buy it, since of all the Tales games I've played, I've only liked Symphonia. However, I hunger for RPGs, and haven't played an action-based one in a while (with maybe the Ys series being the last ones I played, last year).
Tales of the Abyss (the version I'm playing) is a port of the 2006 PS2 game with some minor 3D effects added, while fixing some - apparently pretty bad, I'm told - technical problems. The 3DS version has no load times, which means this version is likely going to be the definitive version of the game. The 3DS gets one of those, for once! ...Okay, Devil Survivor Overclocked is better on 3DS, the 3DS port of Ocarina of Time is probably the new definitive version, and the same goes for Star Fox 64 3D. I guess I'm just bitter that bit.trip.SAGA has technical problems the Wii versions don't have.
As for the game itself, though, I must say I'm really enjoying Abyss so far. I'm about nine or ten hours in. Let me just say this:
The characters in this game are complete assholes, and I love them.
The narrative of Abyss throws your battle party together out of necessity rather than choice, so no one in the party is really comfortable with each other, much less nice to each other. So, whenever one of them screws up, the others pile on that person and make fun of him or her. The main character, Luke, spends most of his dialogue saying dumb things and then telling other people to shut up after they make fun of them. The quiet girl, Tear, the first to join your party, rips on the Luke whenever he gets cocky after battles. She, in turn, is made fun of by Luke for being "ice cold." And not in a flirty way! He means it! As in "You are an ice-cold bitch, Tear."
Then there is Jade. I have no idea what role he will play in the narrative overall yet, but I must say he is already my favorite character in the game (and quickly becoming a very memorable character overall). He's a bit older than the other party members, and he makes it his job to make fun of, embarrass, and just generally be a dick to all of the other party members. He goes out of his way to do this. He's not always overt about it, either. Sometimes, he just stays silent as he watches the other characters make idiots out of themselves. Once, he was called out for not saying anything, and he said something along the lines of "Oops! You caught me. I was enjoying that." My favorite line, though, occurs if the party enters a battle by being chased down by an enemy on the map: Luke will panic and act like everyone is going to die, while Jade says in the most sarcastic voice you'll ever hear "Oh no, this is terrible!" after which Luke tells him to shut up.
I love that guy.
The battles, though, seem to be built on your typical Tales system. It has been years since I've played anything in the series substantially (probably since 2004's Symphonia), so I'm not sure how much different it is from more recent entries. I will say, though, that the system feels just like what I remember of Symphonia's. The enemy groups are all visible on the map, and you don't enter battle unless you touch them. The battles themselves take place is 2D, although you can run around the battle in 3D when you're not attacking by holding the L trigger. Don't worry, it's more intuitive than you'd think. You spend the battles doing button combos, while trying to chain in special attacks throughout, to keep your hit count up to do more damage and keep the enemy from attacking you. If you need to use an item or want to tell one of your AI-controlled companions to use one or cast a spell, you can press X, which will pause the battle while you cycle through some simple menus to do what you need to do. A cooldown timer will then appear on the upper left of the top screen to let you know how long it will be before the item or spell is used. I haven't seen one for longer than two seconds, either, so it's not like you have to wait forever.
From what I can tell, the AI is programmed fairly well, so I don't think you'll have to worry too much about babysitting them or wasting revival items on them too much. You do have the option outside of battle to tweak your party's AI a bit. You can tell the characters to only cast magic when they have 75% or more of their MP unless they need to cast a healing spell, or reduce that number to 50%, 25%, or to use magic willingly. You can pick and choose which spells and abilities they can use as well, so if you don't like them wasting MP on, say, a shield spell that only protects you over a certain area of the battlefield, you can turn that crap right off and they won't cast it anymore. You aren't forced to play just as Luke, either - you can switch your party members at any time and play as a spellcaster if you so choose. I like Luke's gameplay, though, so I've spent the whole game playing as him so far.
The main story so far is basically about averting a war, so I'm not too enthralled with that, although the constant banter between the party members definitely keeps me interested. Supposedly, Tales games subvert genre stereotypes about halfway through, so maybe that will change. I hope it does! But I'm having a blast so far, so I'll keep playing.
It's too bad Inazuma Eleven finally came in the mail a day after I bought Tales of the Abyss. Oh well! I'll get to it eventually...
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