Collection of Mana

Collection of Mana

released on Jun 01, 2017

Collection of Mana

released on Jun 01, 2017

A collection of the first 3 Seiken Densetsu games, known as the Mana series internationally, with a quick save feature added and all 3 soundtracks. The games included are Seiken Densetsu (Final Fantasy Adventure), Seiken Densetsu 2 (Secret of Mana), and Seiken Densetsu 3 (Trials of Mana).


Also in series

Legend of Mana
Legend of Mana
Trials of Mana
Trials of Mana
Secret of Mana
Secret of Mana
Adventures of Mana
Adventures of Mana
Seiken Densetsu: Rise of Mana
Seiken Densetsu: Rise of Mana

Released on

Genres


More Info on IGDB


Reviews View More

Beat Final Fantasy Adventure aka Mystic Quest for GB (thank you, Square, to make so much confusion since there's also the actual FF Mystic Quest for SNES).

Secret of Mana is a classic I've played before, knew what to expect and is still a banger.

But the best part of the collection is having the original officially localized Trials of Mana. Amazing since they released the remake alongside it.

None of the games in this collection are worth playing. There are way better action RPGs out there.

Final Fantasy Adventure: Played, Shelved
Secret of Mana: Completed
Trials of Mana: Backlog

three good-to-decent action rpgs, definitely recommended especially for trials but theyve all aged kind of interestingly

Final Fantasy Adventure: Mystic Question
Complete playthrough. Despite the name, Final Fantasy Adventure is actually the predecessor to Secret of Mana rather than the Final Fantasy series. While clearly primitive nowadays given its original Gameboy origins, for its time this is an incredibly impressive game, with a large world to explore, enjoyable combat and a story with a few interesting twists, alongside a thoroughly excellent soundtrack. I'd have liked there to little more guidance to the world exploration - at times it feels like it's relying on trial-and-error, especially given the very limited information on the in-game map - but we do at least have a good number of guides and walkthroughs about the remedy that. I now really ought to find some time to play Secret of Mana properly at some point, especially given that this was from the excellently put-together Collection of Mana compilation - which for this game, sees the inclusion of the European, US and Japanese versions, as well as the Super Gameboy recolouring.

(This is specifically for Trials of Mana in this collection)



I played the Trials of Mana remake closer to when it came out, I think sometime in 2020. I liked that game a lot, but the presentation was a bit lacking, especially for the remake of a game oft touted as the “best looking SNES game”. The overhauled combat was fun, if a bit simple, and the dub/cutscenes were.. kinda bad actually. At the time, I switched the game to the Japanese dub (mildly better but not great) and wrote the story off as a kinda goofy not-too-serious game.

At the same time I’d picked up the Collection of Mana, the first three Mana games but on switch, and played the first two. I’d loved the first one, Final Fantasy Adventure, which is still one of my fav Gameboy games, and mildly disliked its incredibly popular sequel, Secret of Mana. For some reason, I waited until now to play the original Trials of Mana, and god damn I wish I hadn’t waited so long.

Guys



Guys this game is so damn good



There’s parts of it that are obviously good, stuff like the art (it is, indeed, probably the most gorgeous and spectacular SNES game, FF6 eat your heart out), the music (just stunning), and the cool pacing/story structure. Basically, there’s six playable characters, all with their own interweaving stories, and you choose one as the main character and two as sidekick-type computer (or friend!) controlled characters. Mix this tapestry-style storytelling with the incredible world building, which has been even more expanded upon from the other Mana games, and you get an experience that’s just plain stunning.



The SNES version’s presentation also (imo) greatly enhances the gravity of the story. There’s no goofy VA or overly plucky animations spoiling the serious scenes. Instead you get a gorgeous pixelart scene and somewhat moody OST setting the tone for what end up feeling like serious monologues and dramatic twists. It’s not all dark and edgy or anything, but there’s a range of emotions confidently displayed here. 



What I wasn’t expecting was to like many parts of the game that are, uh, more on the infamous side of things. In particular, the combat is… weird? I don’t even know how to describe it honestly. It kinda feels like a rtwp or ffxii-style system but done on hardware that can’t quite handle it. Now, I had my share of frustrations with this system, stuff like “oh apparently while this character is in this stage of an attack animation she cannot be told to cast a spell” or “wow the enemy just cast two spells immediately after each other, really wish I could cast something while he was charging up that second one”, but broadly I liked the system. It was fun and fast during dungeons, and had a good bit of weirdo complexity and hidden numbers in the back half to give it some depth.

I definitely preferred it to Secret of Mana’s combat, which is more responsive, but (like a lot of SNES games for me) has very touchy hitboxes and that weird goofy meter at the bottom that discourages attacking when it’s not full. Honestly I thought everything people love secret for this game does better, from the music to the art. I guess it doesn’t have three player support without a mod, so that’s a point in secret’s favor, but this one’s fun by yourself so HA.

Obviously I recommend this game, whether you play a fan-translation or the official release it’s still a great time. You can feel it pushing the SNES to its limits, but as usual for me that’s kinda cool (and only noticeable in the menus really). Play it whether you like or dislike Secret, play it if you want a weird but also modern-feeling SNES RPG, play it if you’re in the mood for RPG comfort food that pushes your boundaries more than you would think. Just give it a shot, and see if you vibe.