Hey, nice being featured here (and thanks ^^). I definitely remember just playing the card game for so long until the quotes stuck, having not played any other Tales of games before this one made it quite hard to know them in the first place XD. I just paused and unpaused to get a glimpse of the board until I saw the right card. Just watched my own video again and the cpu literally, halft a second after the quote was said, just aimbotted into the right card at higher difficulties. Might not be the most honorable way to do it, but oh well ^^.
Thanks for listing you video in the creative commons! It was my first time not using either a trailer or my own gameplay, so I was a little nervous. I was really glad to have a group to play Graces with since, as frustrating as the card game was, being able to take a break by letting someone else give it a try really helped.
One of the saddest ones for me is that I ended up dropping my first playthrough of Okami because of this, all because I decided to pick up the Wii version instead of PS2 when it came out. Aside from the Celestial Brush being a bit more touchy than usual, the controls are mostly fine on Wii Remote and Nunchuck... riiiight up until you realize that the basic attacks are mapped to a Wii Remote swing, bit still wants you to do it with the input timing of pressing a button, and enemies in later areas become frustrating with any weapon besides beads, and despite the original release of the game being made for a PS2 controller, the Wii version has no option to use the GameCube or Classic Controller, which is baffling because almost every other Capcom PS2/GC port on Wii has a fulls suite of control options. (I would eventually get to play and finish the game on later HD rereleases, however. Very highly recommended)
Uh oh, I think that's the version of the game I have on my backlog. While it sucks that the controls ruined your initial attempt, I'm glad you were able to find an alternative that worked down the line.
@ExploDjinn If you can, I highly recommend the PS4, Xbox One, PC or Switch versions of the game. The MSRP is only $19.99 on all of them and they frequently go on sale digitally for $9.99. It's absolutely worth double dipping on
That paint chipping off the New 3DS model makes me sad, mine was suffering bad from it after a certain point. Aside from the point, the DS models always challenge me to hold it in the "correct way" or feel the pain.
I remember playing prime hunters at school with my friends in multiplayer. Never touched single player. It was fun for what it was back then but wasn't anything I wanna do now at 34
I hear good things about the multiplayer, but I just don't feel like the genre really fit the hardware. Though hey, I'm not an FPS guy, so what do I know.
I'm glad I never played any DS shooters. I remember the Metroid Hunters Demo was really boring, awkward and hard though. I think I put in 10-20 minutes and never looked back. The controls are part of the reason I don't think we'll ever get a Legends Legacy collection. They'd have to completely redo the engine to fix the controls and at that point, you might as well just do a full remake.
Probably would make it more worth the price given the Legends series only has two games. (Three if we count Misadventures of Tron Bonne, but I doubt it would given none of the other collections contained any spin offs)
I don't think Capcom could resist putting out the last two Legacy Collections, plus the Legends games have been ported before. They also tend to do something for each collection to make them easier, like Rookie Hunter and Buster Max, so maybe the controls could be what they adjust for it. Or maybe they'll just do something simpler, like tweak upgrade prices, but I still think we'll get Legends on modern consoles at some point.
@@ExploDjinn My gut is saying they'll remake them. I mean, they can sell one $30-40 game most newbs will complain about or two $60 games people will love that could grow the series enough to justify a 3rd game? Well, unless Capcom botches them.
Hey, nice being featured here (and thanks ^^). I definitely remember just playing the card game for so long until the quotes stuck, having not played any other Tales of games before this one made it quite hard to know them in the first place XD.
I just paused and unpaused to get a glimpse of the board until I saw the right card. Just watched my own video again and the cpu literally, halft a second after the quote was said, just aimbotted into the right card at higher difficulties. Might not be the most honorable way to do it, but oh well ^^.
Thanks for listing you video in the creative commons! It was my first time not using either a trailer or my own gameplay, so I was a little nervous.
I was really glad to have a group to play Graces with since, as frustrating as the card game was, being able to take a break by letting someone else give it a try really helped.
One of the saddest ones for me is that I ended up dropping my first playthrough of Okami because of this, all because I decided to pick up the Wii version instead of PS2 when it came out.
Aside from the Celestial Brush being a bit more touchy than usual, the controls are mostly fine on Wii Remote and Nunchuck... riiiight up until you realize that the basic attacks are mapped to a Wii Remote swing, bit still wants you to do it with the input timing of pressing a button, and enemies in later areas become frustrating with any weapon besides beads, and despite the original release of the game being made for a PS2 controller, the Wii version has no option to use the GameCube or Classic Controller, which is baffling because almost every other Capcom PS2/GC port on Wii has a fulls suite of control options.
(I would eventually get to play and finish the game on later HD rereleases, however. Very highly recommended)
Uh oh, I think that's the version of the game I have on my backlog. While it sucks that the controls ruined your initial attempt, I'm glad you were able to find an alternative that worked down the line.
@ExploDjinn If you can, I highly recommend the PS4, Xbox One, PC or Switch versions of the game. The MSRP is only $19.99 on all of them and they frequently go on sale digitally for $9.99. It's absolutely worth double dipping on
That paint chipping off the New 3DS model makes me sad, mine was suffering bad from it after a certain point. Aside from the point, the DS models always challenge me to hold it in the "correct way" or feel the pain.
It is one of the heavier handhelds, so a comfortable grip is important.
I remember playing prime hunters at school with my friends in multiplayer. Never touched single player. It was fun for what it was back then but wasn't anything I wanna do now at 34
I hear good things about the multiplayer, but I just don't feel like the genre really fit the hardware. Though hey, I'm not an FPS guy, so what do I know.
Kid icarus uprising controls are what scare me from starting the game
Yeah, really hoping if I drag my feet enough, we'll get a remake before I get around to it.
I'm glad I never played any DS shooters. I remember the Metroid Hunters Demo was really boring, awkward and hard though. I think I put in 10-20 minutes and never looked back.
The controls are part of the reason I don't think we'll ever get a Legends Legacy collection. They'd have to completely redo the engine to fix the controls and at that point, you might as well just do a full remake.
Probably would make it more worth the price given the Legends series only has two games. (Three if we count Misadventures of Tron Bonne, but I doubt it would given none of the other collections contained any spin offs)
I don't think Capcom could resist putting out the last two Legacy Collections, plus the Legends games have been ported before. They also tend to do something for each collection to make them easier, like Rookie Hunter and Buster Max, so maybe the controls could be what they adjust for it. Or maybe they'll just do something simpler, like tweak upgrade prices, but I still think we'll get Legends on modern consoles at some point.
@@ExploDjinn My gut is saying they'll remake them. I mean, they can sell one $30-40 game most newbs will complain about or two $60 games people will love that could grow the series enough to justify a 3rd game? Well, unless Capcom botches them.