Wow! Someone's a presumptuous asshole fanboy! I've played Final Fantasies 1,6,7,8,10; Tales of: Eternia, Symphonia; Shin Megami Tensei 1; Xenogears; Xenosaga 1; SMT Persona 2: Original Sin, and Persona 3. Some of these games are good, but none provide a proper role playing experienceDefense said:It's a crappy linear waifu simulator-slash-generic space marine third person shooter, but it's not a JRPG.
I bet you're the kind of person who thinks every JRPG is like Final Fantasy.poppabaggins said:Mass Effect actually lets you develop a personality for your character via dialog choices. JRPGs lock you in to what the designers want you to do. There really aren't any RPG elements in JRPGs, so the term is definitely a misnomer.
And, for the record: stats do not equal role playing
And for the record: You don't know what you're talking about.
I don't know that this is entirely true. Ignoring the JRPG versus non-J RPG definition, since there probably is no actual specific definition for those terms beyond the use of turn-based combat, the Mass Effect series still allows the player to determine the nature of their character and the way they influence events in the world. Personally, I did not stick to either Paragon or Renegade 100%, and was not noticeably penalised for that decision. I was maybe 25% Renegade without being limited in my choice to pursue the Paragon plotlines, which is probably enough for players who are actively deciding when and where they cross their own lines of morality.AlternatePFG said:It isn't an RPG, it's a third person shooter with RPG elements. A great third person shooter series, with some great characterization and writing mind you but the RPG aspect has always been bad. The first games RPG elements weren't any better than the second, they were pointless. A game where you only pick between two well-defined character types and are punished for mixing them, is not a good RPG period.
Still a great series though.
Also, not all JRPG's are like that. You're just assuming the entire genre is Final Fantasy, and you're treating the term JRPG like an insult.
Not all JRPG's use turn based combat. That doesn't define a JRPG. It's just an RPG made in Japan.Nackl of Gilmed said:I don't know that this is entirely true. Ignoring the JRPG versus non-J RPG definition, since there probably is no actual specific definition for those terms beyond the use of turn-based combat, the Mass Effect series still allows the player to determine the nature of their character and the way they influence events in the world. Personally, I did not stick to either Paragon or Renegade 100%, and was not noticeably penalised for that decision. I was maybe 25% Renegade without being limited in my choice to pursue the Paragon plotlines, which is probably enough for players who are actively deciding when and where they cross their own lines of morality.AlternatePFG said:It isn't an RPG, it's a third person shooter with RPG elements. A great third person shooter series, with some great characterization and writing mind you but the RPG aspect has always been bad. The first games RPG elements weren't any better than the second, they were pointless. A game where you only pick between two well-defined character types and are punished for mixing them, is not a good RPG period.
Still a great series though.
Also, not all JRPG's are like that. You're just assuming the entire genre is Final Fantasy, and you're treating the term JRPG like an insult.
I probably should have quoted you initially so you knew I was responding to you, but I accidentally didn't. My apologies.AlternatePFG said:Not all JRPG's use turn based combat. That doesn't define a JRPG. It's just an RPG made in Japan.Nackl of Gilmed said:I don't know that this is entirely true. Ignoring the JRPG versus non-J RPG definition, since there probably is no actual specific definition for those terms beyond the use of turn-based combat, the Mass Effect series still allows the player to determine the nature of their character and the way they influence events in the world. Personally, I did not stick to either Paragon or Renegade 100%, and was not noticeably penalised for that decision. I was maybe 25% Renegade without being limited in my choice to pursue the Paragon plotlines, which is probably enough for players who are actively deciding when and where they cross their own lines of morality.AlternatePFG said:It isn't an RPG, it's a third person shooter with RPG elements. A great third person shooter series, with some great characterization and writing mind you but the RPG aspect has always been bad. The first games RPG elements weren't any better than the second, they were pointless. A game where you only pick between two well-defined character types and are punished for mixing them, is not a good RPG period.
Still a great series though.
Also, not all JRPG's are like that. You're just assuming the entire genre is Final Fantasy, and you're treating the term JRPG like an insult.
Okay, sure. You can get through the game with mixed paragon/renegade. And yeah, you can pass all of the checks with at least 3/4 full of one or the other, but that's still just playing one of the two versions of Shepard, with some minor variations. You don't get any options in actually playing the game, aside from speech checking, or gunning down everything that moves.
If it's an RPG, which I don't think it is, it's still not very good as one. That's why I prefer looking at it like a shooter.
No offense, but you would define a lot of the D&D I've played and seen as a JRPG, which is not only utterly incorrect and misleading but to do so would make the term useless. Oh and ME is not turn based, no matter how you look at it.mtarzaim said:So, is ME a JRPG?
I would say yes.