THANK YOUWhat the heck's wrong with you guys? How has no one posted that freakin' legendary battle theme yet!?
THANK YOUWhat the heck's wrong with you guys? How has no one posted that freakin' legendary battle theme yet!?
Jrpgs wasnt reviewed that well at the time. Only FF games got great scores.I always see people saying how great this game was but why don't the reviews match what people say?
Ah don't feel bad, it had its moments for me - most of my problems with the game are based on my preferences. Some people liked the things I didn't, and that's a-okay with me. Like I mentioned, the music and art direction were great. Even listening to the OST now brings back a lot of good feels. I may have to check out Origins because it seems to be universally liked more than the original.Aw this made me sad :(
At one point I also thought battles were too time consuming so I'll be honest, I just grinded for a little bit and I haven't had a problem since. Most Monolith Soft games have this flaw tbh lol
As for the weaknesses, I've never had much of an issue, really. I try to avoid putting Dark cards as much as possible, and pretty much all monsters that are weak to Water or Fire are also weak to something else, or at the very least, aren't resistant to other elements.
The voice acting I mostly like. Sometimes it takes me out of the moment, and sometimes it's charmingly horrendous.
I like the design of the characters. *shrugs* Their outfits are pretty odd but I love the faces for all of them
Idk it has never felt too slow to me personally, but obviously that's due to the fact that I enjoy far more aspects of the game than you. Sorry u didn't enjoy ur time :(
Because it's rough around the edges and fans are less likely to notice or care. And probably because it's not a super famous JRPG.I always see people saying how great this game was but why don't the reviews match what people say?
This is a detailed and well done explanation of the pros and cons of BK1's battle system. I certainly didn't miss waiting for all the attacks to play during the defense phase in Origins. The animations were painfully slow to watch so that certainly hasn't aged well by today's standards. And having opposing element cards cancel each other out was frustrating.they didn't release the sequel in Europe ;_;
I was so into the first one as a kid, when i read there was going to be a sequel in the video game magazine i used to buy, i was so exited. Then it was never released. Broke my young heart. Compensated it by playing the first one over and over.
The game was turn based. However, during your turn, your opponent could defend himself and, conversely, you could defend yourself during theirs. To fight you used a deck of cards. You could only have a small number of cards in your hand at a time and, as you used them, other cards from your deck would take their place.
Each of your cards had a number (from 1 to 9), and the idea was to do combos (like a straight in poker: 1,2,3,4,5,etc... or 5,4,3,2,1,etc...). At the beginning of the game each card would only have one number, but as you advanced, you would start getting cards with 2 numbers, then 3 and finally 4 (one number per corner).
When you were first introduced to the idea of being able to choose cards to defend yourself (so a defensive phase), it seemed like a brilliant idea, but later in game, i'd say it started to affecting the pacing of battles in a negative way.
The game had to give you a bit of time before each of your opponent's hits, so that you could chose a card from your hand to defend yourself with. This wasn't much of a problem at the beginning of the game, where both your combos and those of your enemies were short (2-3 hit combos). However, you would eventually be able of doing 6-9 hit combos, and your enemies would too.
Imagine you were in a boss battle, later in the game, fighting against 3 enemies at once. After your turn, you'd have to sit thought each of your 3 enemies combos, one at a time: a slow 6 hit or more combo that ended in a (even slower) charged/finisher move. That was once per turn.
The defensive turn didn't just affect the pace of battle, but also the process of building a deck. The fact you had to reserve part of your deck for defensive cards (i.e. cards that could not be used during your attacking turn) made making a deck that much more difficult.
Ideally, you would want to set up your deck to increase the likelihood of getting a straight (1,2,3,4,etc...) in your attacking turn. You wouldn't get a straight on your hand right away, obviously. But, as you started a combo (with a low number card, expecting to go up from there, or a high number card, expecting to go down), the other cards you needed would supposedly come in (with a bit of luck and a good constructed deck).
To increase your likelihood of doing combos, you needed to have an equal number of 1s, 2s, 3s etc... Managing that balance as you were constantly getting new cards to put in your deck was hard enough, but then there was also the fact that, as you advanced through the game, the number of card you could have in your deck would increase from 20 to 30, 40, 50, etc... (throwing that balance off, forcing you to remake your deck).
To make matter worse, each of your characters had its independent cards and deck, meaning you had to maintain that balance of 1s, 2s, 3s, etc... for a minimum of 3 characters. Then add to this, there was (if i remember correctly) 6 types of cards. They were distributed in 3 groups of 2, which each pair counteracting each other (i.e. if you used a water card and a fire card in a combo, they would cancel each other). And on top of all that, you had to reserve part of your deck to defensive cards? come the fuck on.
The fact you had to reserve part of your deck for defensive cards, made making straights on your attack phase that much more difficult. The defensive cards you currently had on your hand during your attack phase, couldn't be used for attacking, effectively making your hand smaller and taking up space from offensive cards.
Still, you couldn't simply ignore the defense phase and only include offensive cards in your deck since, if you did that, you'd take way to much damage during your defensive phase (as the game expected you to use defensive cards as "shields", as you were getting hit).
So, you had to keep an extremely tight balance between how many attack and defense cards you had, in addition to having an equal number of 1s, 2s, 3s, etc... for both the attacking and defensive phase, in addition to making sure you didn't use cards with opposite types, in addition to doing all this with a minimum of 3 separate decks (you could fight with 3 fighter at once) but your party was bigger than that (like in all RPGs). So, yeah...
It's not like the defense turn was that fun anyway, since what generally ended up happening during it was that you were scraping to find anything you could use to defend yourself with, disregarding card combos and such (which where the fun part). Just as defensive cards took up space on your hand during your attack phase, your attack cards took space during your defensive phase.
What all this meant was that, if you wanted to have a good deck (i.e. a deck that increased the likelihood of you getting crazy combos), you were constantly spending way to much time managing your decks thought the game. And don't get me wrong, i enjoyed doing it, but that didn't stop me from seeing the flaws in the system and how it could have been much more straightforward.
There were different solutions:
- not having a defensive phase at all
- having two separate decks, one exclusively for defense, one for offense
- all your characters sharing one deck
Although, for the last one, the problems that come with attack and defensive cards sharing the same deck would still be there? Of course you don't want to oversimplify things, you want to find a right balance, but i don't think the first game got it quite right.
I know the second game changed the battle system, by having all your characters sharing a single deck? I can't remember what else they changed. I'd like if anyone who has played both game's could comment on how the dynamic of battles and building a deck was on one game compared to the other
If you open your menu, go to system and then voice you can turn it off.Honestly just wish there was a mod or something to remove the voice acting altogether since i know some of those later heavier story beats are gonna fall so flat cuz of it, but what can you do.
If you open your menu, go to system and then voice you can turn it off.
I gave one character nothing but healing items and cameras so I'd never be low on health ever. It made the game super easy and slow but it never bothered me. The limited inventory size (the blank cards) was annoying though. Especially since that old dudes book is basically a permanent slot iirc
The twist at at the end was pretty dumb. I don't recall having a particularly strong connection to any of the characters except paddle dude. He was awesome.
Wait, If you mean VA i understand, but everything else seems fine to me, the music is actually one If the highlights.
The main thing that stops people from really appreciating Baten Kaitos is that you really have to learn and understand the battle system early on in the game to make it through the entire game. As it's been mentioned, the game has some ridiculous difficulty spikes that can catch you off guard.
Giacomo, Folon, & Ayme is one battle that pretty much ends your save file if you aren't leveled up properly with a good deck , as you're stuck on the ship if you save there and cannot go back to the church to level up while on board. That's bad game design. I've read that it's technically possible to get past that part with a little luck if you're underleveled, but still, that's ridiculous.
Loved this game and origins. These are games that I really wish got remastered or remade for the Switch.
Although the voice acting in the first game could definitely use an update, as they all sound like they are talking with buckets on their heads (Has this even been answered by any devs? I just imagine they had all the VO done over the phone and into their microphones.)
BK was also one of the few games that I remember was a drastic shift from Disc one to Disc two with a particular boss battle I wont spoil, but I was caught off guard by that moment and the fight was very bitter feeling.
The leveling up system was another thing I greatly remember, because I didnt figure it out until an accident. Kept getting my shit wrecked in the first Giacamo boss fight, and it was because I had never once leveled up. I didn't know the Blue Flowers would take me to an area to level. But I was young and skipped a lot of tutorial talk.
Love BK so much, GameCube was my main console (I had the others, just mained GameCube) so the game was always on my hype list. I would watch the Japanese advert for it that I downloaded from IGN or something over and over and over lol. So hyped.
It was the game (sprinkled with being a fan of Xenogears previously) that sparked my true love of Monolith Soft, and I've been a #1 fan and collector of all their work ever since! I've said it before but it really warms my heart to think back to those days and today see the powerhouse/important to Nintendo/really popular dev they've grown into now. <3 One of Nintendo's best decisions was buying them.
AND...
Origins is even better! Wow, now THERE is a game I absolutely looove everything about! <3
The first Baten Kaitos was better than the second one battle system-wise because I liked the more complicated poker bonuses. But yeah, the sound design was much better for the sequel and the battle system was much more streamlined. But I unfortunately barely remember anything about the games! lol It leaves an impression but a weird faint one like after waking from a fever dream.
YEAH! If I recall, the second game had more of some turn-based system where the first one was more speed-based where the more poker hands you got the more you could link up more combos? Or am I mixing them up now? hahah..I'm so happy to meet another person who feels that way and prefers the firsts battle system more. I missed the more variety/poker bonuses in origins. Both great games though.
Is there a good recommended walkthrough or video that can explain the card battling system? I own the first game, but I am so lost in the battles.
Beautiful game, I just hope I can figure it out sooner or later.
I think it's the first RPG in which I never avoided a fight because it's just so good. The fact that every battle feels like a mini-arcade game gives it an amazing feel. To this day, I still play the game on my Wii just to fight a couple of monsters and then switch the console off. Really love the feeling when you MP Burst massive EX Combos in Relays. Just brilliant.Update, I'm roughly 10 hours in. It's one of those games where I'm decently overleveled without really trying, simply because I like the combat so much lol.
Wrong link, let me fix that for youWhat the heck's wrong with you guys? How has no one posted that freakin' legendary battle theme yet?!
Shame on you.But I was very young and dumb and gave it to someone I liked as a gift and etc. etc.
sadly the prequel did remove some of the coolest areas in BK1.Lol not even the weirdest part of the game. I love how psychedelic the whole experience is
sadly the prequel did remove some of the coolest areas in BK1.
yep same here...and i think they removed the ice world, didnt they?Yeah I heard you don't visit Mira :( lame, it was my favorite island of the original
yep same here...and i think they removed the ice world, didnt they?