

If you can only get one version, I would recommend the Vita version. I will say that I think that the cross-save ability is one of the best features to come out of modern gaming.
RAGNAROK ODYSSEY ACE MODDED SAVE PS3
I received both the PS3 and Vita versions for the purpose of this review. That should make ACE worth a purchase for someone who enjoyed playing the original. After you finish the main campaign that was included in the original Ragnarok Odyssey, another new campaign opens up to essentially double the playtime from the original. Ragnarok Odyssey ACE expands on the original Ragnarok Odyssey released in 2012. You can talk to a few NPCs throughout your adventure, but no real reason for why you are fighting is explained. However, there isn’t any story to keep you emotionally vested in ACE. Eventually the online abilities are unlocked. You start out in a single-player mode where you are kept offline. Some of the later levels do require some assistance, and having mercs available at a whim is great for those of us who can’t plan in advance.
RAGNAROK ODYSSEY ACE MODDED SAVE OFFLINE
While that is helpful if you want to go online, if you want to play offline you can hire mercenaries to assist you. If boss battles like this frustrate you, then you’ll definitely want to take a pass at this game.Īs you get later into the game, you can have others online join you in the monster hunting. They seem out of place after the cake walk you went up through to the point of getting to them. These require thought and tactics that make your previous fighting skills feel useless. While most of the monsters are easy to defeat, at the end of each chapter of quests a boss fight occurs.

It would be a little more interesting if said monsters were more varied, but they appear in the same place every time. The quests sound interesting, where you will collect a few items or explore an area, but in the end all you are really doing is fighting your way through a set of monsters in an area. You can pop them in the air and constantly attack them until they are defeated, extending your combo count. The enemies you fight against are relatively easy, defeated with a simple combo. The areas you travel through are short, making the maps you travel across seem small and choppy. Once you start a quest, you are transported to the location and start fighting against monsters. You can visit the armory to have you clothes changed and have more slots put into your clothes to equip more cards.

You only have a small number of slots available for these cards, so you will want to choose wisely which ones you equip.

While you will need to visit certain locations at least once, you can deal with them from the central location without running around to retain their services.Ībility cards are items you attach to your armor to gain extra abilities, like increasing your hit points or reducing your vulnerability to poison. However, after playing some of them, they just had a unique look to what would be considered typical classes.Īfter choosing a class and customizing your character, you find your character in a hub where you can get quests, talk to villagers, buy and sell equipment, and change his or her appearance. The six available classes looked very different from the typical warrior, thief, wizard, and archer. Upon entering ACE, I found that the colors were bright and vibrant, an improvement over the typical brooding protagonist living in a dark and stormy world. I would soon find that these two titles would have more differences than similarities. When I had heard about Ragnarok Odyssey ACE being another action-RPG with the ability to cross save, this piqued my interest to check it out, even though the third-person perspective was much different from the side-scrolling in Dragon’s Crown. The RPG featured several different classes, accessible but deep combat, and the ability to cross save between the PS3 and Vita. When Dragon’s Crown was released on the PS3 and Vita, it was a pleasant surprise.
