First: “YES!!!” Second: “Why didn’t they put IV and V in the box set?” I later learned that, while Masaya’s name appears on the box and credits for IV and V, this was something of a formality, as Career Soft (the creators of Growlanser) took on the bulk of development for those games. Personally, when I saw the announcement for this box set, I had two reactions. The game played in a manner almost identical to the aforementioned Nintendo and Sega franchises, with the key exception that money earned was spent on expendable troops that surrounded your hero and could be used to take on other “fodder” troops or even take a crack at an overpowered villain. The first game in the series was localized as “Warsong” in North America, and that was all we ever saw of the five-part series (though that changes this year with Aksys localizing Langrisser Re:Incarnation for 3DS). For those of you who don’t: sometime between Nintendo releasing Fire Emblem and Sega releasing Shining Force, there was a new tile-based strategy RPG on the scene entitled Langrisser. If you’ve found your way to this review, it’s likely you already know what Langrisser is. Langrisser Descendants of Brilliant Light (PC Engine)Ģ1 – Enemy Reinforcements ġ1 – Allied Reinforcements 1 Ģ3 – Enemy Reinforcements 1 ġ0 – Inside a Cave ~ Beach BGM ~ Night BGM
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