thebaroness
Member
Shin_Kojima said:Congrats. What ending did you get?
I guess the Main Happy ending? I saved Chrono, Spared Magus, and kept the Epoch. I beat Lavos after finishing the Black Omen.
Shin_Kojima said:Congrats. What ending did you get?
Love the Black Omen's musicthebaroness said:I guess the Main Happy ending? I saved Chrono, Spared Magus, and kept the Epoch. I beat Lavos after finishing the Black Omen.
wutShin_Kojima said:What ending did you get?
I'm kind of the same way. I love Chrono Trigger to death, but I've started way more replays than I've finished. Sometimes I stop as early as the factory. Not for any particular reason other than distraction I guess. But it doesn't seem to happen as often with other games I replay.Soule said:I have only beat Chrono Trigger like 3 times, however I swear I've started it like 20 times, I love this game but somehow get distracted or it gets shoved to the backburner when I get into it. I only beat it for the first time in like 2003 as well so it was already dated but the experience really stuck with me, it amazed me how good it was and I really didn't expect it. Great to hear it still mesmerizes people today.
Tried beating it 2 times but I've lost my save during the first and sold my DS before the second.Tomat said:FINE, I'll go start my damn playthrough already.
Interesting, I think the combat system is one of the major reasons I like the game so much. If it employed an old school FF style combat system I don't think I'd like it as much.Adam Prime said:I just can't deal with the silent protagonist and the ho hum combat system of the game.
Adam Prime said:It took me starting this game like five times before I ever finally finished it. I can understand how people think it's the GOAT of JRPGs or at the very least it's their personal favorite. I'm sure if I had played this game during the SNES, or even PSX era - I would've been way more impressed than I am now.
I think it deserves all those accolades from people who love the game, but personally I enjoyed more recentlymore than Chrono Trigger. I just can't deal with the silent protagonist and the ho hum combat system of the game. Also right now, I'm playing through Trails of the Sky on PSP and I can already say that I am enjoying that game way more than Chrono Trigger.FFXIII
Chrono Trigger, has too many of my personal distastes... yet I can understand how beloved it is.
I'd qualify this a little: I love the battles and how the game transition in and out of them -- but I don't think the battle system itself is very intricate. That's the thing, though, unlike in other RPGs of its era, the battles don't feel tacked on. They're not as much of a system (and even a world) of their own. What you do in the battles, the characters seem able to do outside of them as well.Soule said:Interesting, I think the combat system is one of the major reasons I like the game so much. If it employed an old school FF style combat system I don't think I'd like it as much.
haha the factory is a bit of a graveyard for my playthroughs, i'm not a big fan of that drab setting so it tends to burn away at my nostalgic motivation when I hit there. I honestly find all the time periods bar the destitute future to be so engrossing and awesome, I've spent so much time just flying around the map.Aeana said:I'm kind of the same way. I love Chrono Trigger to death, but I've started way more replays than I've finished. Sometimes I stop as early as the factory. Not for any particular reason other than distraction I guess. But it doesn't seem to happen as often with other games I replay.
Definitely. Also, seeing the artwork of the boxart and knowing you can do that in the game gives me a bit of a geeky satisfaction as well.Goldmund said:I'd qualify this a little: I love the battles and how the game transition in and out of them -- but I don't think the battle system itself is very intricate. That's the thing, though, unlike in other RPGs of its era, the battles don't feel tacked on. They're not as much of a system (and even a world) of their own. What you do in the battles, the characters seem able to do outside of them as well.
Soule said:haha the factory is a bit of a graveyard for my playthroughs, i'm not a big fan of that drab setting so it tends to burn away at my nostalgic motivation when I hit there. I honestly find all the time periods bar the destitute future to be so engrossing and awesome, I've spent so much time just flying around the map.
Definitely. Also, seeing the artwork of the boxart and knowing you can do that in the game gives me a bit of a geeky satisfaction as well.
If you run 255 perfect circles around Spekkio, the elemental affinity of all characters changes.Ultimoo said:*looks at boxart*
*sees Marle casting Fire on Chrono's sword*
:|
Goldmund said:If you run 255 perfect circles around Spekkio, the elemental affinity of all characters changes.
dankir said:Zeal?? PFFt
Man I have the music from when you first fight Masa and Mune always playing in my head. Especially during medial tasks like making a sandwich, going to the bathroom, etc.
It's so fucking epic.
Goldmund said:If you run 255 perfect circles around Spekkio, the elemental affinity of all characters changes.
It removed the most important part though - you don't make decisions about what the characters are doing.FF13 returned to this system, where you had to choose your healers and buffers and fighters in balance.
Which is silly - that they can re-release a game that's over a decade old, which is readily available for free through a variety of means, and have it sell at all, says a lot about the game's quality.When asked by RPGSite staff if he could forsee Square handing off other much-loved but neglected franchises to external developers as with Front Mission, he asked what franchise we had in mind.
Our response? Of course, Chrono Trigger.
"Why does everyone ask about Chrono Trigger?" he laughed. We told him it's a very loved series. "That's not what the sales tell me!" he responded.
"If people want a sequel, they should buy more!"
By the end of the game, very few characters have unique abilities/spells. You'll have something random like Vanille not having Haste, but it's not really game defining in the same way Marle being the ONLY character with Haste was.That was the exact feel from FF13. Lightning had basic healing, but Vanille outclassed her there. But Vanille's physical was so weak, that meant possibly using Hope, but that takes up a valuable SAB slot. Not to mention choosing Snow vs Fang, depending on whether you needed more Sab vs Rav.
So mix and matching was the entire push behind party choosing in FF13.
Haste.Marle is completely useless, both Robo and Frog are more than capable healers, and actually contribute to combat. Marle has no place in the game as soon as you can remove her from the party.
Ultimoo said:I always ran Chrono / Frog / Magus because it was the bad-ass team. who cares about haste when I can spam Dark Matter all day.
*makes Dark Matter sound constantly*
Love the game but why would you do that? I just youtube the endings without wasting countless hours playing the same thing.Psykotik said:now to go back and see all 13 (?) different endings
I don't even play most games anymore, I just watch We Play / Walkthroughs. That way I can skip to the good parts.Wazzim said:Love the game but why would you do that? I just youtube the endings without wasting countless hours playing the same thing.
Ultimoo said:I don't even play most games anymore, I just watch We Play / Walkthroughs. That way I can skip to the good parts.
true story
Dawwwwww you'll be the best dad ever!czk said:I can't wait until I'll go through Chrono Trigger again, this time with my children.
Way off.galian beast said:Marles strongest magic attack is an 8mp magic attack ( ICE 2) Ice Sword 2? Really, that's a joke.
Frog has Cure2, and Robo has heal beam.
The dual techs you get with Robo and Frog are far superior than Marles.
I like you.Karsticles said:Haste.
Willy105 said:That sucks. Since games are games, I think it's fine to watch playthroughts and We Plays, even all the way to completion, since you are not getting the actual experience you pay for to play a game.
But to watch it so that you don't have to play it?
gunbo13 said:<Explanation on why Crono/Marle ends universes>
revolverjgw said:This game is PERFECT. The pixel art, the music, the pacing, everything is impeccable.
industrian said:It's one of the two games I consider perfect. The other being Ocarina of Time.
Chrono Trigger is god tier gaming. I could start my 8th playthrough of it now and play it constantly for 20 hours without being bored. Everything about it is gaming at it's finest.
The thing that really gets me though is that (ESPECIALLY for a RPG) you can start playing it and not have to read the manual/backstory, or knowing about monster races, in-game struggles between nations or some apocalyptic war that happened exactly 1000 years ago or some shit - everything is explained to you in due time and at a good pace.
Don't listen to this man!Correctomundo said:Seconded. You can find the Chrono Cross soundtrack somewhere and listen to it sometime. It's really the only good part of the game. Well, Sprigg's world is kinda cool, but you'd have to slog through the rest of that mess to get there.
Goldmund said:Don't listen to this man!
I don't think the plot of a video game is important, not even the writing. That's not what I was talking about. The game has a distinct tone which it is well aware of and that's rare.Kalnos said:Nah, he's pretty right, at least in regards to story. Chrono Trigger was good because it had a simple story that didn't take itself too seriously, where Chrono Cross felt like fan-fiction.
Chrono Cross does have an excellent OST though.
gravitybear said:you mean magus right? masa/mune have the normal boss music.
assuming that, if you walk around with that song in your head while doing normal things you must really be doing them with panache and badassery.
You should strap a sword to your back and just make it LEGIT