After another long hiatus, I finished the next PCE RPG, so here's another review. This time, it's relatively better known (at least amongst this crowd) Tengai Makyō: Ziria. AFAIK, this is the first console-CD RPG that was released, and along with that was tagged as PCE's "big budget" RPG-series of the era. You can tell that this game clearly had Dragon Quest/Warrior as a template, and the developers simply changed the environment, added in some wacky humor, and added couple extra tidbits that CD-format allowed them to do. It's also pretty damn long. I'd guesstimate the playtime at maybe 50-60 hours or so, but it
felt like it was double that. I've said this in previous reviews of other RPGs - perhaps I'm just more time-impatient these days with a job & family and all that, but this one was a just a grind toward the end. It took me 13 months(!) of on-off playing to finally finish this one off.
Anyway, starting from the gameplay - TM:Ziria feels like it was created by a cookie-cutter console-RPG-template back in the days. It's got the typical talk/tools/magic/status/etc menus in the overworld, and fight/magic/tools/run/etc... during the fight scenes. You meet several NPCs before your party eventually stabilizes into a group of three, and you carry on your fight against the evil baddies, and you have to grind quite a bit to make sure that your party has a chance of survival as they move on. Sound familiar enough? Well, the developers made sure you got a looooot of it. It's not the most impressive CD-game in terms of presentation, but man, I can say that they took advantage the abundant space storage to make sure that there was a lot of game.
As for the more unique bits about this game, you can't not notice the wacky environment. There's the pseudo-feudal Japan setting, and the game throws a lot of goofball characters at you. Because of this unorthodox setting, it makes it more difficult for those of us who are non-Japanese to really "get" everything (language barrier aside), but it at least makes for an interesting, and more exotic setting than your typical console-RPG settings. The plenty of wacky characters that are strewn throughout the game are also memorable - the crazy gaijin Hotei, the oni father-son duo, mischievous tanuki monsters, etc., and also Tsunade, the little girl with a big axe, who provides plenty of comic relief throughout the game.
The overworld graphics are pretty dated, but is colorful and interesting enough with the aforementioned Japanese environment, and there are a couple scenes that look quite good. Battle graphics are better than your average RPG, as there are a number of cool backgrounds, and the enemies are well detailed and are quite sizable. Cinema scenes are pretty basic - it's mostly static background shots with characters talking along. I suppose the big wow for its time would be the addition of speech, which is nothing now, but at least the voice acting is pretty well done, especially whoever did Tsunade.
The music is almost all chiptunes. It's not bad, and it fits the mood and atmosphere of the game. However, it's nothing particularly memorable IMO. Being a CD game and all, some cool redbook tunes here and there in the overworld would've been nice.
All said, I would've been mighty impressed had I played this game when it was first released -- when I was playing the likes of Dragon Warrior I. Compared to the competitors of its time, graphics are much more colorful, enemies are big and detailed, plenty of cut-scenes, and even speech(!). The only one that might've held a candle to this game perhaps would've been Phantasy Star I (which was way ahead of its time IMO). However, there are just a number of aspects about this game that hasn't aged very well.
Still, if you're a retro-gamer, you can appreciate how much has gone into making a game like this in a 1989-context. If you like old-school RPGs and the PCE, Ziria should be on your playlist, but make plenty of time for it.
I still have the sequels - Manji Maru and Kabuki-den to go through (which I've bought in 2005!), and just from screenshots and reviews from others here, I'm expecting a lot more polish from them...
Compilation of my other reviews:
Aurora Quest: Otaku no Seiza in Another WorldAne-sanBabelBakushō Yoshimoto ShinkigekiBlood GearBuraiCosmic Fantasy 1Cosmic Fantasy 3Dragon Knight IIIDragon Slayer: Legend of HeroesDragon Slayer: Legend of Heroes IIDowntown Nekketsu MonogatariKO Seiki: Beast SanjūshiKūsōkagaku Sekai: Gulliver BoyNekketsu Legend BaseballerTengai Makyō: ItōryōdanValis I~IVXak I & IIXak III