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Thursday, June 11, 2026

Fire Emblem: Engage

The followup to the somewhat divisive Three Houses, Engage goes back to basics in many ways.  While Three Houses felt fairly overdesigned between its class system, school sim elements and just a generally massive cast, Engage goes back to a being a fairly streamlined and linear adventure.  Characters come and go at the whim of the story, the Weapon Triangle returns, and there's no longer a class system in place.  Given that it was also meant as a celebration of the franchise's 30 year anniversary, its plot also incorporates this in the form of Emblems - heroes from previous games who fight alongside this game's protagonists in spirit form.  Characters can equip rings that grant access to Emblems, and filling the meter to activate an Engage grants them new special moves and bolsters their stats for a few turns; a bit similar in premise to Persona (or Tokyo Mirage Sessions).  As characters use their Emblems more their bonds improve and they gain more passive bonuses.  The visuals have seen definite improvement too, with more expressive characters and a lot of visual flourishes on special attacks, giving it an almost tokusatsu vibe.  That said, the actual plot of the game isn't really anything to write home about - an amnesiac hero (or heroine), four countries entrusted with powerful artifacts, a dark dragon threatening to drive the world to ruin again, you've seen it all before.  Still, if you want a Fire Emblem that goes back to basics while introducing a more streamlined new mechanic and paying homage to games of its past, this is one you may want to peruse.


Developer: Intelligent Systems
Publisher: Nintendo
Released: 2023
Platform: Switch

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Like a Dragon: Ishin!

A non-canon offshoot of the Like a Dragon franchise set in the Bakumatsu era of Japan, it reimagines most of the central class as samurai and the central conflict becomes a plan to overthrow the oppressive class system of the era.  It utilizes action-based gameplay of the old games rather than the turn-based style of the most recent mainline entry, but changes things up to utilize four appropriate combat styles for the era.  Brawler is most similar to general series fare, emphasizing quick strikes and throws for crowd control; Swordsman has Ryoma wield a sword to do slower but high-damage attacks; Gunman has him use a revolver for ranged combat and elemental shots, and Wild Dancer simultaneously uses sword and gun, focusing on quick attacks and evasion but unable to block.  Leveling up is handled in a similar fashion to the Kiwami games, earning generic orbs that can be placed to unlock abilities on any the four style grids, or style-specific ones that can be swapped in once earned to allocate generic ones elsewhere.  Of course the series' staple of side content is here in full force too, with a lot of side missions to complete, Virtue to collect by fulfilling certain tasks and milestones, and minigames like fishing, singing, chopping wood and even a few anachronistic ones like Mahjong and Texas Hold-Em (and even a top-down shmup).  The feel of the game is largely familiar despite the change in time period, but if you want a fun non-canon tale in the Like a Dragon universe with some creative change-ups, Ishin is another fun game to spend your time with.


Developer: Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio
Publisher: Sega
Released: 2023
Platform: PC, PlayStation 5, XBox Series

Monday, May 11, 2026

Sylvan Tale

Another obscure Sega IP, with its one and only entry being a late release for the Game Gear exclusive to Japan.  Kind of a shame, as it's a solid Zelda-like for the platform. You venture through various dungeons, find items and powerups that let you get past certain obstacles and reach new areas, upgrade your health with oranges, and battle enemies and bosses.  The plot is pretty minimal, just having your character track down six magic macguffins that can vanquish evil, but it's serviceable enough for a portable game.  The game controls smoothly and plays well, has colorful visuals and smooth animation, and even has some pretty solid music for the hardware, and you can save your game at (almost) any time, which keeps the frustration factor to a minimum.  Sylvan Tale is pretty fun little game while it lasts; maybe not worth the prices it goes for secondhand nowadays, but certainly one to check out emulated, especially since there's a fan translation available.


 Developer: Sega
Publisher: Sega
Released: 1995
Platform: Game Gear