If you have fond memories of spending entire school breaks playing SNES or PS1 era Final Fantasy games from Square, then I have a feeling that Bravely Default on 3DS will be right up your alley. This is an RPG that feels a lot like classic Squaresoft prior to the merger with Enix, right down to the job system that evokes Final Fantasy V.
In Bravely Default you?ll have control over a party of four adventurers, set out to reignite the defused magical crystals that hold sway over the primary elements on their world. You?ll travel across a large overworld map, complete with optional side-quests, bosses, towns, NPC?s, and random encounters to contend with. This is, very much, a classical RPG experience in every way imaginable. There?s definitely some modern conveniences added in, like the ability to adjust difficulty whenever you want, or even turn off random encounters completely. But by and large this is the type of RPG that made me fall in love with the genre in the first place.
The Job system is the other big mechanic of Bravely Default. There are 24 different jobs to uncover, a lot of which are tied into optional side-quests that are well worth completing. The job system is pretty eclectic too, allowing for not only your standard White Mage, Black Mage set-ups, but also Valkyrie, Salve-Maker, Merchant and many more. Each job contains its own unique abilities and skills that evolve as you level up, and you can choose to equip abilities from any job class in conjunction with the class you?re currently trying to level, provided you?ve learned those skills previously. This allows for some interesting combinations in battle, so you could potentially have a White Mage Ninja, or a Red Mage Monk, essentially crafting a party that is wholly unique to you.
Another interesting online feature is the ability to summon friends into battle, allowing them to perform their own special attack once in a fight. You can also link a friend to one of your four party members, giving you access to any job skills they?ve already learned, regardless of whether you?ve leveled up that job or not. This can be a bit broken depending on who you link up with, potentially giving you access to skills far earlier than normal, but I think it?s a neat feature that alleviates some of the grind inherent in maxing out 24 different jobs.
I?d highly urge you to check out Bravely Default when it launches on February 7th, it?s certainly one of the best RPG?s I?ve played in recent years, and stands right alongside the excellent Shin Megami Tensei IV on the same system. This is the sort of RPG that I think we all want to see Square Enix make, and it?s nice to see that the company that built Final Fantasy still has it in them to produce something of this caliber. If you have any affinity for the Final Fantasy brand, you?ll absolutely love Bravely Default.
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