![]() ![]() I absolutely love how interesting these classes are. You unlock the remaining four in pairs of two with story progression. You start off with four playable classes: Samurai, Agent, Duelist, and God Hand. I can see why they didn’t bother doing an English voice over here as well which is something to consider before jumping in. There’s tons of portraits for both male and female party members and plenty of voice actor options for the few lines of voiced dialogue and battle dialogue - more than I could be bothered to preview before setting up my party. The customization options here are the real stars. #7th dragon 2020 psp dlc upgrade#The main hub lets you construct and upgrade various things, which in turn help you buy more items. The difference is that you’re encouraged to stock up, prepare, and take out these dragons in each areas so you can build your base. Here, there are dragons that are indicated by purple icons on the map. Dungeon crawling visually is similar to your traditional chibi style 3DS JRPGs while the combat and the layouts of enemies reminds me of Etrian in a lot of ways. Having played a few Etrian games as well as Bravely Default, I found a lot to like here. The story is never in your face but there’s more than your average Etrian Untold game and it keeps things interesting enough as you power through floors of dungeons. There’s time travel, hacking, rabbits who keep insulting you, cat ears, and more in 7th Dragon III Code: VFD. A video game corporation called Nodens Enterprise teams up with you and a party to save everyone (this is a JRPG after all). The premise here is dragons descend onto Earth and things are about to get very bad for humanity. Having not played the previous games on DS and PSP, I wasn’t lost at all in Code: VFD - there are some historical references but nothing felt major. I’m glad SEGA took a chance on this release because it breathes some new life into the dungeon crawling genre with interesting changes, making it feel like the best of various franchises rolled up into one great package. 7th Dragon III Code: VFD is something I never thought I’d get to play in English, yet here we are. ![]() Being a fan of Japanese games involves various stages of excitement and disappointment as you see multitudes of games announced that may never make it outside Japan. ![]()
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