Posted on: January 1, 2022

seanwood7777
Verified ownerGames: 579 Reviews: 92
Kind of like Seiken Densetsu 3...
This is my (modified) Steam review of the game, when I played it in late 2018. It's like they took some of Seiken Densetsu 3, made the combat faster paced, removed magic, turned the limit break dial to 11, added a ton of puzzles that usually involve richocheting projectiles. Then slapping an MMO theme on it with tons of sidequests, materials to trade for gear, etc. The combat has equal focus on melee and ranged, melee being more damaging, staggering enemies, while ranged is safe, but weaker, also getting out of reach enemies. It's satisfying to beat up everything in sight, while also building up a chain to increase drop rate as you keep chaining enemy aggro. Then there's the element system, you get 4 different elements that exploit enemy weaknesses to take them down faster. CrossCode has a FF10-esque sphere grid skill/stat system, although less complex. Progression is like this: After the big tutorial/prologue, you explore an overworld area, while fighting wandering enemies at your own pace (most of them only aggro if you attack them) and optionally traversing all sorts of hidden and obscure platforming paths, sometimes filled with puzzles, that unlock shortcuts, or a path to a chest, or someother. Also, beating up all the local destructable plant life, to get about half of the games trading materials. Then you come across towns filled with quests, traders and the like, as well as the main quest eventually leading to a dungeon. Dungeons are typically filled with platforming, tons of puzzles, enemy gauntlets, and a boss. Rinse and repeat several times, with things switching up every now and then to keep it interesting, especially midgame, and towards the endgame. I'd say it's definitely worth 20$ for the amount of gameplay you get out of it (at least 25-60 hours), not to mention the game took seven years to make, the dedication for the game really shows, as it's pretty damn polished and great overall, minus some frustrating flaws and technical issues.
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