Phantasy Star – Sega Master System
- For Sega Master System
Product Description
RPG Classic “Phantasy Star” for Sega Master Systems.
Buy Phantasy Star – Sega Master System
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Product Description
RPG Classic “Phantasy Star” for Sega Master Systems.
Buy Phantasy Star – Sega Master System
Related posts:
In this game you play as a girl (Stong Lead Females were Extremely rare back then) by the name of Alis Landale. In the beginning you are in Camineet where your brother Nero gets killed by Lassic’s Robogaurds he tells you just before he dies to seek out a man named Odin in your quest to defeat Lassic and save the algo star system!!. PS is moderately simple to play the menus are simple to navigate, PS was differnet from other RPGs because of 3-D Dungeons, Monster’s attacks are animated, it has HP counts telling you how much HP your enemies had , it represented multiple enemies with multiple HP counts. Although this was a excellent game it was over shadowed by Final Fantasy and Dragon Warrior/Quest
Pros
Simple to navigate menus
Exellent Visuals (for the 8-bit Era)
Takes a Small time for Battles
Had Actual Characters (unlike FF which is more like make-a-team)
Had 5 save slots
Could Save at Anytime
Cons
Simple to get lost in 3-D dungeons
Simple to get bored of
Takes long time to level up when in the lvl 8-30 range
Rating: 5 / 5
If you look at the sports meeting that are said to have catalyzed the console RPG boom, you’ll hear the names Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest/Warrior thrown around. Because of the NES’s popularity, many gamers really overlooked Phantasy Star. What they also overlooked was a game that FAR surpassed anything they had seen, or ever WOULD see again during the 8-bit era. Yuji Naka, who you may all now know to be the mastermind behind the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise, made something back then which revolutionized console gaming. With its faux-3d dungeons, fully animated enemies, storyline centered on rebelling against a corrupt king, and the novel quest of excellent struggling against evil, Phantasy Star set the standard that all forthcoming RPGs would have to follow.
Phantasy Star places you in the role of Alis Landale, a teenage girl who lost both of her parents in an accident, and had only her grown-up brother, Nero, to rely upon. That was until she lost him as well, as he’s killed out of retaliation by King Lassic’s guards for starting a rebellion. With his last breath, Nero pleads for Alis to find out the truth behind King Lassic, to find out why he suddenly became an evil tyrant. Swearing that her brother would not die in vain, Alis set out to find a man named Odin, Nero’s friend in the rebellion. This is where an epic quest of self-discovery, exploration, and the pursuit of truth starts. An adventure across three worlds, each with its own pattern (green, desert, and ice), Alis travels to copious towns, and ventures owing to many dungeons in order to accomplish her goal. Combine all of this with a soundtrack that captures the moods of the many environments, and you become immersed in a world which for the 30 hours you devote to it, you may believe is your own.
With a well-paced and balanced difficulty, Phantasy Star is neither a game you can run owing to in a day, nor one that you will have to toil over for hours just to be strong enough to advance. From every technical aspect, Phantasy Star exceeded all expectations for sports meeting of that era, and continues to amaze those players who missed out the first time and go back to experience it. Why? Because it even surpasses a excellent number of titles seen on the 16 bit systems with its difficulty, visual superiority, and depth of gameplay. Don’t believe me? Then play it for yourself, and be reminded of a time when RPGs in fact presented a challenge. If you manage to complete it, you have only taken the first of four steps into the PS Universe, and can look forward to more of the same excellence in Phantasy Star 2 owing to 4…
Rating: 5 / 5