There?s a pretty good chance before you even read this review that you?ll know whether or not you?re interested in what Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance has to offer. After all, regardless of platform, there?s a certain style, and definitely familiar elements, present in just about every Kingdom Hearts title to date.
But the series has definitely seen some revision, both good and bad, over the course of its seven platform entries. And while the series has, at this point, seen more play time on portables than home consoles, a lot of those portable outings have been?lackluster. Birth by Sleep, on PSP, being the major exception, to the point that it?s largely considered the best in the series.
Some of that is due to the fact that I feel like the main plot, focusing on Sora and Riku, actually feels like it gains some forward momentum. This certainly isn?t Kingdom Hearts 3, but it definitely sets things up in a way that makes you feel like an honest-to-goodness sequel is certainly forthcoming. While Birth By Sleep did a great job of chronicling the history of series antagonist Xehanort, and the whole Keyblade Masters angle, I was more than ready to revisit the cast in the present, and Dream Drop Distance really scratches that itch for me.
Flowmotion allows you to make use of the environment, and bound off of objects quickly, often transitioning into special attacks. It?s also great for just standard traversal through Dream Drop Distance?s vast stages. You?ll come to rely on the mechanic so much, that it will be hard to go back to earlier games and see this particular function missing.
Dream Eaters are craftable, experience gaining creatures that fill the role previously held by Goofy and Donald Duck as party members. Enemies drop crafting items in the game, and you can attempt to fuse these items into Dream Eaters with or without the help of recipes. Dream Eaters also provide a way of gaining new Commands for both Sora and Riku. These are earned through a skill board, where you?ll spend earned skill points on the various Dream Eaters in order to earn new Commands, and a variety of skill boosts.
The menu used to access, create, and swap them out never really gives you enough information to make an informed decision without a lot of busy work and mental tracking on your end, which makes their inclusion here over the far more intuitive Command fusion and leveling of Birth By Sleep feel like a step in the wrong direction.
But on the flip side of that, it?s about the only real negative thing I have to say about Dream Drop Distance. It?s a beautiful looking game on the 3DS, and compares favorably to the gorgeous Birth By Sleep on the PSP. It?s certainly a step up from any other Nintendo handheld entry in the series (which isn?t saying much, I know), and looks pretty fantastic in full 3D. The soundtrack is also filled with a lot familiar tunes, but also some catchy new ones and a nice Dearly Beloved remix at the title screen.
So it?s certainly worth picking up, and I think most KH fans will fall in love with this entry. It certainly feels like one of the better entries in the series, and is also one of my favorite games on the 3DS right now.
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