Tag Archives: Atlus

Odin Sphere Leifthrasir’s European Release Confirmed for June

NISA Europe have announced that they will be publishing the 2D sidescrolling action RPG Odin Sphere Leifthrasir in Europe, for the PlayStation 4, PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita. The game will be localized in English, French, Italian, German, and Spanish, and will be available in both digital and physical form. The special Storybook Edition will be exclusively available from Amazon UK and GAME, with preorders becoming available tomorrow. For more information on the contents of this edition, take a look at our previous articles! It’s not clear at the moment if the softcover art book preorder bonus, which is being included in all versions of the game in the US, will also be included with the regular EU release.

You can view the English trailer on NIS America’s Youtube channel below. It’s the same as the one posted by Atlus U.S.A. earlier, but they also have the trailer available in other languages. Odin Sphere Leifthrasir will be released in the Americas on June 7th.

Odin Sphere Leifthrasir: Storybook Trailer (EU - English)

Source: NISA Europe, via Gematsu

Genei Ibun Roku #FE Vocal Collection

New Trailer for the Genei Ibun Roku #FE Vocal Collection Album

Japanese record label Avex have posted a trailer on their Youtube channel, promoting the upcoming release of the Genei Ibun Roku #FE Vocal Collection: Fortuna All Stars album. The album is a compilation of 18 vocal tracks featured in Genei Ibun Roku #FE. There’s also a website where you can listen to previews of some the songs featured on the soundtrack. The soundtrack will cost 3240 yen (tax included) and will be released on the 10th of February in Japan. Persona Central posted an English translation of the track list,

The game itself is already available in Japan, and is scheduled to be released in North America in 2016.

FORTUNA ALL STARS / 「幻影異聞録#FE ボーカルコレクション」PV

Source: Avex, via Perfectly Nintendo

SMT IV Final Krishna

Shin Megami Tensei IV Final Character Video Series: Krishna

The Shin Megami Tensei IV Final character video series from Atlus continues with the dapper dude in green: Krishna. He is the leader of the Polytheistic Alliance, a new faction introduced in FINAL, which seeks a coalition between deities in order to subjugate humankind. He is described as selfish and manipulative, and seeks Flynn’s allegiance for his own purposes.

We often see Krishna with the bansuri, a flute that is an important part of the mythology of Krishna in Hinduism.

Like the video on Daguza, this video is an extended monologue series featuring 8-bit-inspired graphics.

The release date for Shin Megami Tensei IV Final (January 10! basically one week left!) is fast approaching. There are many characters who have not received a monologue video; perhaps it’s being received for some of the newer major characters?

The video is below for your viewing. I must say, I wasn’t expecting this voice; he sounds quite young.

真・女神転生IV FINAL 神話動画 #2 クリシュナ(語り部/久野美咲)

Credit for the featured image goes to this p-nintendo.com article.

Atlus Shows the First English Trailer for Odin Sphere Leifthrasir (UPDATED)

Update: Atlus has posted a preview of the 64 page artbook that comes with every preorder of the game. We included the preview below!

Original article: Atlus has posted the first English trailer for Odin Sphere Leifthrasir, featuring the English voices for all the main characters. The game is a remake of the original Odin Sphere, running in 1080P and 60fps on the PlayStation 4, and contains new content and an overhaul of the gameplay mechanics. The game will also feature dual audio support, allowing you to switch between English and Japanese voices. You can take a look at the trailer below!

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Odin Sphere Leifthrasir 8-bit Release Featured Image

You Can Now Play the 8-bit Version of Odin Sphere Leifthrasir

Back in 2015, Atlus announced that they would be releasing a browser-based version of Odin Sphere Leifthrasir, emulating the style of classics 8-bit games. Today, Atlus has released the game to the public, and you can play it on their official website. You play as Gwendolyn, and the goal is simply to survive as long as you can. As you defeat enemies you’ll gain experience and become stronger, but at the same time the enemies increase in number and strength as well.

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Persona 4 Ultimax PlayStation Store Boxart

Persona 4 Arena Ultimax is Part of the Free PlayStation Plus Games Lineup in February

One of the benefits of the PlayStation Plus subscription is that you get access to a free list of games every month. In February last year, Yakuza 4 was part of that list. Today, Sony revealed the games that will be made available to PS Plus subscribers this February in both the US and the EU, and it contains an Atlus game, namely Persona 4 Arena Ultimax. This 2D fighting game from Atlus is the sequel to the original Persona 4 Arena, and both games were developed by Arc System Works (known for Guilty Gear and BlazBlue).

Despite being 2D fighting games at heart, both featured an unusually elaborate plot, set after the events of Persona 4. Told in the style of a visual novel, the stories featured most of the main characters of Persona 3 and Persona 4, and also introduced new ones. For that reason, for fans of the Persona series the game is almost worth playing for the story alone. That said, the story relies heavily on the player’s knowledge of the previous games, so not knowing the background story or the characters will likely make the story a lot less interesting.

I do find it a bit surprising that they picked the sequel (Ultimax) for the PS Plus lineup instead of the original Persona 4 Arena, which to my knowledge has not been made available for free on PS Plus before. After all, the story for Ultimax serves as a direct sequel to Persona 4 Arena. Regardless, it’s both a solid fighting game and an elaborate epilogue to Persona 3 and Persona 4, so if you’re getting it for free, there’s no reason not to try the game!

Source: EU PlayStation Blog and US PlayStation Blog

Odin Sphere Leifthrasir’s Storybook Edition Includes Metal Slipcase With Gwendolyn Artwork

We knew that Odin Sphere Leifthrasir was getting a “Storybook Edition” release, exclusively for the PlayStation 4, which contained various extra’s compared to the regular release. One of those extra’s is a metal slipcase, and today, Atlus U.S.A. have revealed the artwork that will be featured on the back cover of that slipcase, which you can view below. The artwork features Gwendolyn, one of the game’s five playable characters. Earlier on, Atlus had also revealed the exclusive Alice and Socrates art print that will be included in the Storybook Edition. We also added the preview for that art print below, along with an updated image showing the entire contents of the Storybook Edition.

Odin Sphere Leifthrasir will be released on June 7th for the PlayStation 4, PlayStation 3, and PlayStation Vita in the Americas. The game will also be released in the EU somewhere during Q2 2016, but an exact release date hasn’t been announced yet. For now, there are no details on whether or not the Storybook Edition will also be released in the EU.

 

Daguza SMT IV Final

Shin Megami Tensei IV Final Character Video Series – Daguza

Atlus of Japan’s YouTube account will be periodically posting character videos for Shin Megami Tensei IV Final on the way to its February 10 release date. Today’s video is for Daguza. Daguza revives the protagonist and bestows him with the power to control demons. Daguza is likely not so charitable for its own sake – and in the occasional pieces of promotional images we see that Daguza is likely affiliated with the Polytheistic Alliance (Daguza makes mention of Krishna a few times near the video’s end), a group comprised of deities who unsuccessfully attempt to lobby Merkabah and Lucifer to their side. This was all in a gambit to subjugate humanity through a massive coalition of godlike beings, instead of gods warring against each other and then one victor subjugating humanity. To that end, the protagonist may be a helpful tool to the Alliance’s goal. Or he may not be…it’s up to you!

It’s rather long, at about 2:30 minutes, and the extended monologue and sprite animation is a rather unexpected direction. I rather like how Daguza is animated here. But be warned, the same revival sequence that you see once is repeated about half a dozen times, so if you don’t know Japanese you’ll have to learn to love the animation of Daguza floating around.

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New Atlus Logo

Atlus Moving Forward on EU Localizations? Odin Sphere Leifthrasir – Q2 2016, EFIGS

Atlus CEO Naoto Hiraoka made some interesting comments regarding business plans for Atlus’s products moving forward – more specifically regarding release of Atlus products outside of Japan. This by way of Gematsu‘s translation of a Japanese Playstation Blog post featuring a reprinting of Hiraoka’s comments to a recent issue of Dengeki Playstation. By the way, if you didn’t already know, the Japanese Playstation Blog has been host to quite a few entries featuring Yakuza content as of late, so it’s been receiving quite some content featuring Sega properties.

I’ve reproduced the comments that Gematsu translated below, directly:

“In terms of the marketplace, from here on I want to put even more strength into our overseas efforts,” Hiraoka said. “Up until a few years ago, there were some things, including the development of our international website, that we left to staff overseas. However, in recent years we’ve been wanting to make sure everyone gets the same information, so we made it so you can jump to the global website from the home page of the official site in Japanese.”

Hiraoka continued: “As you can also see from the close Japanese and foreign release dates for Dragon’s Crown in 2013 due to its online elements, the barrier between the domestic and overseas market is dying. As for Odin Sphere: Leifthrasir, it will go on sale in America on June 7 and in Europe in Q2, and while it is slightly delayed from the Japanese release date, it will not only be localized into English, but also French, Italian, German, Spanish for a total of five languages.

What is mentioned here regarding websites and information is already observable. As my colleague Draikin pointed out, the English page for Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA F is actually hosted on Sega’s Japanese domain for Project DIVA games. While not Atlus-related, with Atlus being a part of Sega the point should be clear. If Sega West hosted it then it might offer its own signal about Sega West, but this is nice to see in any case.

Such comments do seem positive, in any case. Atlus has historically not had the strongest presence in Europe, whether in the form of a delayed release for Shin Megami Tensei IV or the lack of self-managed localizations for their products in Europe. In the past year NISAmerica handled distribution of Atlus titles. It isn’t entirely clear that Atlus will be publishing games themselves in Europe, so let us see what the company does with its next titles.

It’s interesting to note that Atlus sees the “domestic vs overseas barrier” as dissipating. Those are rather confident words. Sega has vowed to learn from Atlus since the latter’s acquisition, so one can hope that such a mindset is incorporated into the former’s company culture. Sega has been of the opinion that it’s important to adapt their games for Western tastes, but Atlus’s philosophy on localization doesn’t seem to view that as similarly necessary, or at least not to an especially significant degree. Atlus seems to take a stronger position on the “niche-ness” of their titles, and Sega so far seems keen on more broader reception of the comparatively niche IPs within their own stable.

The promise of an EFIGS localization is quite exciting, and a release window of Q2 2016 for Europe puts the region in close company with the US. This might bode well for Atlus and European Atlus fans!

Yakuza 5 Gets 2nd Place in “Best PS3 Game” Category of the 2015 PlayStation Blog Awards

Sony has revealed the results from the official 2015 PlayStation.Blog Game of the Year Awards, and Yakuza 5 has ranked in the top three in two categories. It got 2nd place in the “Best PS3” games category (behind Metal Gear Solid V) and 3rd place in the “Best Digital Release” category (behind Rocket League and Life is Strange). Yakuza 4, which fans could also vote for as “Best Free PS Plus game”, unfortunately didn’t get enough votes to rank in the top 7. On the side of Atlus, Persona 4: Dancing All Night managed to rank 3rd as “Best PS Vita Game”.

It’s certainly nice to see Yakuza 5 getting recognition from the gaming community, despite being released this late in the PS3’s lifetime! With this, and Yakuza 0 also confirmed to be localized for the West on PS4, things are starting to look up for the future of the Yakuza franchise in the West.