What are all the shin megami tensei games
Persona 3 - Original version is my least favorite Persona, even if it was a fairly good game. The total focus on school life is still fun although I wasn't big on the personal stat grinding.
I also found Tartarus to be really boring, with the floors barely differentiating themselves from each other and the layouts being randomized.
I did like how the music built upon itself as you got higher though. Devil Summoner: vs. King Abaddon - Pretty cool game. I like how they made the luck stat important here, and I really like how you can send your demons in to negotiate with their conversation skills.
SMT If Haven't played all the others, so I can't rate those. And I have yet to beat this game so I will save my ranking of P5 for later. MakotoYuri 4 years ago 2. NextGenCowboy 4 years ago 3. Digital Devil Saga 1 and 2: Ideal blend of classic systems, difficulty, story, music, etc. All rolled into one package, and focusing on elements the series rarely uses. All-star voice cast, crazy attention to detail, and enough side content to keep you busy for a year. Persona 4: Golden: Unique in that it covers a genre that's rarely done in gaming, a fairplay murder mystery, and doing so in an RPG.
Extremely memorable cast, music, and, most importantly, setting. Taking all the classic cliches of the whodunnit, and mixing them with a rural Japanese town. Changed the face of the series, and there's a lot to love.
That said, some people prefer a story driven more by characters, or plot development, than the classic approach taken here. Raidou 2: Probably the most underrated game in the series.
One of the best English scripts of all-time, massive amounts of improvements to the battle system. Tons of interesting NPCs and carryover from Raidou 1, and the most direct interaction with Lucifer in the series.
Majin Tensei 1 and 2: Underrated, needs a translation. It's essentially the proto version of Devil Survivor. Beautiful games, especially considering their age. Persona 3: Solid to great in all areas except gameplay. Which has not aged well. But arguably just as solid elsewhere. I'll call it a wash with the above.
EP's cast is astoundingly good. Devil Survivor: Overclocked: Great game in most areas, but an insane amount of minor frustrations. Unlike a lot of the other RPGs that you might have played over the years. Shin Megami Tensei V is the newest game in our compendium, and man does it look incredible on the Switch.
When gameplay truly begins and out main character opens his eyes to a now ransacked Tokyo that more resembles an apocalyptic world, he fuses with spirit to become the ultimate warrior. Operate in the realm between light and dark, treading the fine line of the law and handing out your own demonic judgement.
There are so many cool improvements like a revitalised a partner system, better magic, improved demon attributes, and tonnes of amazing extras. As is the case with most of these games, it takes place in a version of the future that I want nothing to do with. Tokyo is more like a colony these days after the gods declared war on each other, and the whole city is encased in stone.
As always in the best Shin Megami Tensei games, the morality engine and your alignment plays a massive part. For those who would like to follow a strictly chronological order though, here is all you need to know about how each game fits into its very loose timeline. Released in for the Super Famicom, this is considered the birth of the Shin Megami Tensei series and the point from which it spun off from the larger Megami Tensei series.
It is set in a post-apocalyptic version of Tokyo, where humans coexist with demons. At the time of its Japanese release, Shin Megami Tensei was believed to take place in the near future, which places its events sometime in the s, or X as the game puts it. The bulk of the game takes place following a thirty-year time jump, and the gameplay is presented in a first-person perspective with turned-based battles.
The next game on the overall timeline is Shin Megami Tensei: Nine. And contrary to the "nine" in its title, this is actually the fourth entry in the series. The game was released exclusively for the Xbox in , making it the only one to have appeared on a Microsoft console to date.
Nine also holds the distinction of being the first one to make use of 3D graphics and character models, employing a presentation style quite similar to the earlier Resident Evil games, with fixed camera angles and static pre-rendered backgrounds. The game takes place sometime between the events of the first game and its sequel, Shin Megami Tensei 2. Another game that is also set between the events of the first two entries in the series is Shin Megami Tensei: Imagine.
Originally intended as a massively multiplayer online expansion for Shin Megami Tensei: Nine, Imagine was instead released as a standalone title several years later. The servers for the game have since been shut down, meaning that Imagine is no longer playable today. The console never really took off in Japan, so seeing it get such a big name property to itself is a little weird.
The reception was mixed and though its visuals were praised, the combat was confusing and made battling feel like more of a task than it should have. In some cases, the sequel does it better and in others, it just fails to hold a candle to the original. You can chalk Shin Megami Tensei 2 up as belonging to the latter category. Though it did do some things right, this title is lacking in almost every aspect. While the original SMT was notable for its unforgiving level of difficulty, its successor toned those elements down.
Too much in fact, as it just seemed like all the challenge had been taken out of it. It was just too similar to its predecessor while lacking in several key areas. One of the more modern mainline SMT games, Strange Journey may have very well sparked interest in the series here in the west once again. The game that started it all, the original Shin Megami Tensei never actually got a release in the west.
Unless you count the iOS version that was released back in — which you may as well not. The game is a great introduction to the series, and though there may not be any official releases worth playing, there are ways around that.
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