Friday 11 October 2019

Elemental Battle Academy (PC)

Elemental Battle Academy is a kind of combination of a multi-person fighting game (with up to eight combatants in a match), and a third person shooter. But the combat's largely base around melee. You know what I mean though, right? Anyway, it's about a bunch of magical girls fighting each other in big arenas, with a camera just behind the one you're controlling, that's the main thing I'm trying to get across here.

I have to say this about the game: it's incredibly well-made. It's only a doujin title, but it could easily pass for a mid-budget console game. Not only that, but it all works like it should, too: no glitches, graphical or otherwise, and it all feels very stable the whole time you're playing. If these compliments seem a bit suspicious that's because the above qualities make it difficult to be too hard on the game, and unfortunately I am going to have to do that. The big problem is: it's just not very fun to play.

For a start, all the characters have way too much health, so taking them down (or being taken down yourself) takes far too long, especially when the default settings have matches going until someone's scored five knockouts. Similarly, the arenas are enormous, and even with the maximum quotient of eight characters in them, they feel vast and empty, and this is made even worse when you play story mode, which largely consists of one-on-one battles in these vast,cavernous stages.

Worst of all though, are the controls, which seem to have been designed for people with an unusual abundance of digits. For example, your character is equipped with a melee weapon and a projectile weapon. You move her with the left stick, and turn around/aim with the right stick. Whichever weapon you want to use, attack is mapped to the square button (or the X button if you're using an XBox controller, but the problem here is that it's a face button). This is fairly manageable for melee attacks, where you just need to be pointed in the general direction of your target, then you press the button to attack. To shoot at them, however, requires you to hold down R2 to ready your weapon, aim it with the right analogue stick, then fire with the attack button. If you're really ambitious, you might also be using the left analogue stik to avoid incoming attacks.

There's also outfits and accessories and joke weapons to unlock for all the characters, but if the game itself is no fun, then that's no t much consolation, is it? All in all, Elemental Battle Academy is a finely-constructed exercise in tedium. I guess it really does offer the AAA experience on a doujin budget then, eh?

1 comment:

  1. This is nostalgic as heck. I know Japan LOVED this kind of combat game back in the day, these Virtual On-style titles. There were also the Robo-Pit games on the PSX, Last Legion UX on N64 I think falls into this category too, and more obscure Japan-only titles like Reverthion or Koutetsu Reiiki Steeldom... just a bunch. They almost never make them now outside of doujin titles though, and I don't think they're ever going to thrive outside of an arcade environment, but it is always interesting to see someone bringing this style of game back for the occasional go-round. Especially when they fail to modernize the controls - that's always a real blast from the past. If I remember Virtual On Oratorio Tangram for anything, it's thinking, "Thank God this has auto-aim," lol.

    I guess this kind of game just evolved into games like KurtzPel, Naruto Shinobi Strikers or Black Clover: Quartet Knights, huh?

    ReplyDelete