Global Standard | ||
Global Standard | €45.86 |
Elle, a village in the remote region of the imperial territory suddenly disappears. A young boy named Kanata suffered a nightmare, awakening from his strange dream to find a village vanishing and losing every function and all civilisation. With the help of a dubious ally Ban and the teachings from a mysterious man from Kanata's dream, the power of memory is awoken within Kanata enabling him to restore Elle village to its original state… Memory is an instinct exists element and dictates the rules of the world, however, if memory is lost then the world itself will be lost as well With the rest of the empire also experiencing lost memories, Kanata and his freinds: Lumina and Locke set out on a journey to save the world from disappearing forever.
LOST SPHEAR is also available on PC.
Ever wish you could bring a memory back to life? Tokyo RPG Factory has transplanted the essence of Chrono Trigger and other classic SNES JRPGs into a beautiful modern engine to revivify the Active Time Battle system for a new generation of players in the form of Lost Sphear.
Lost Sphear is a good game in which Tokyo RPG Factory has taken good notes on the features that were criticized in I am Setsuna. While it's true that it isn't a perfect game and even though it has improved aspects such as the combat mechanics or the greater variety in the surroundings, it continues to have room for improvement in others, such as the dungeons.
Lost Sphear is Tokyo RPG Factory's latest attempt to capture that golden age nostalgia, but its lackluster story and bloated systems aren't quite up to the task.
Lost Sphear is a good J-RPG but it feels way too generic to stand out amongst the field of available competitors.
Lost Sphear is a new game from Tokyo RPG Factory. It is decent but has some very old features and therefore 50 euros is way too much.
Aiming squarely at gamers' nostalgia for mid-90s roleplaying games and hitting nothing but a vast white void, Lost Sphear is a fun game bogged down by a muddle of throwbacks and a cacophony of unoriginal, competing ideas.
Lost Sphear is an RPG that’s hard to recommend to everyone, offering a mixed and unbalanced experience. The combat is fast-paced, rewarding and challenging yet sometimes garish. The Spiritnite system is fantastic and yet the Vulcosuits feel undercooked. All in all, Lost Sphear offers an inconsistent experience that is ultimately brought down by an overwhelming sense of tedium and repetition.
July 26, 2017
Lost Sphear, the new RPG by I Am Setsuna studio, will be released in January 2018. Watch video