Reviews from

in the past


This review contains spoilers

this review, like this game, will age horribly. i know this. i know this game can be incredibly scuffed in some places, but none of it stopped my enjoyment of the game, enough to 100% it. it took me 80.9 hours according to steam. (admittedly with leaving the game open when i went to go do shit around the house). I preordered the ultimate edition in july, so i spent $110 on this game, and ive been waiting for it to come out for 2 years. I was not disappointed.

Ill start the actual meat and potatoes of this review with my complaints on this game i rated 5 stars
My biggest complaint is without a doubt bandai namco's horrid dlc policies, even with the ultimate edition you dont get everything. it gives you all the costumes and a few items that give you a discount at the store (about 33% in total if i did the math correctly). what it doesnt give you, that is of actual substance, is the ability to carry more than 15 of one consumable. 15 is the series standard, but not a good one because it encourages hoarding. the character models are going to look like dookie in 2-3 years. ill talk about the story, especially the second half, near the end of this review
as far as gameplay goes, this game is fucking CLEAN. it takes berserias stamina over mp formula but adds a basic attack for combo extension/doing something while waiting for stamina to recharge. this sounds so basic but it adds a lot to a decent formula. i have 0 issues whatsoever with the gameplay. shared CP instead of individual MP is also a good thing because it lets you waste less orange and pineapple gels. i was so used to being an mp hog that i stopped myself from using double demon fang because it was a goddamn mp blaster in the past games.
some people have problems with the localization, such as the VAs and constant typos, but i think the voice acting is perfect, and the typos add soul, so i think its a good localization.

now for the story: FULL SPOILERS BELOW
the game starts off pretty decent, i think that for a jrpg this is a good time between opening up the game and getting to play the game. you start as iron mask who is a slave in generic fire land #37, but one day you find a renan, the people who have been enslaving you, running away from her own kind, shionne. blah blah blah she stole the fire master emerald and has a curse that makes it so that anyone who touches her goes into excruciating pain, but also lets iron mask use a flaming sword that just looks like a stalagmite in a volcano. you go with the rebels and wowee kachowie, you kill the first boss whos name sounds like ballsack after you learn iron masks name is alphen. after you beat him theres a girl from the next area, winter area #71, coming through the door that you just destroyed. you go with her and the old fart dad thats going to die (ooooh who coulda guessed)
and then the rest of the game sort of follows this formula of you go to area and discover whats wrong and meet the local resistance and fight some bosses and then a big one, a lord in area 1 2 4 and 5, and just an annoying enemy in area 3. i know this review makes me sound like im being harsh on this game, cause tropes and whatnot, but the game actually presents all this really charmingly and changes up the formula enough to keep it fresh.
in grasstopia you learn its a paradise with equality between renans and the slaves (dahnans, i never mentioned that renans are from a nearby other planet). after you dick around for a while and be mean to the local black man (im like 95% sure that dohalim is the only black character in the game) you discover a conspiracy to turn all the dahnans into a giant soup. when dohalim finds out about this you have to fight him, and then go to the castle and fight the asswipe responsible for this's monster. the next area is actually really fucking awesome, you get there just after the rebels "successfully" overthrow their lord, and since you have 2 renans with you (shionne and dohalim) the leader acts like a dick to you and gives the nice guy bad intel so you waste your time in a pointless dungeon that you have nothing to show for doing. while you were doing that, they actually found her and you go to the execution. this is legitimately the coolest part of the game, because you get to see this saturday morning cartoon villain just fucking kill hundreds upon hundreds of people all at once by turning them all into soup. it fucking rules. after you go and catch up with her boat, you learn that the girl from the ice land (rinwell) actually saw that lord kill her parents. yadda yadda, you win.
the next area is so bizarre, because you dont have shionne with you after she got kidnapped and this weirdo psycho whos actually the fifth lord kidnapped her, and broke the rest of alphens mask, making his design 20x more boring. you learn that everybody is a mindless drone that just goes off to their deaths, and the renan soldiers are basically just robots. after you fight the fifth lord, you learn that theres more to the game and a red-clad woman steals all of the chaos emeralds and the master emerald that comes from getting them all. this part did such a good job at being absolutely terrifying.

PART 2 IS HERE

after this, you just sorta go around dahna solving problems until you finally get the balls to go and defeat the big baddie and go fight a giant spirit. after this you go and find a spaceship to lenegis, renas capitol, which is basically an artificial moon. when you get to lenegis, you learn that the caste system makes renans themselves on the same tier as what dahnans were treated, all depending on how much magic they could use. you fight dohalims hypnotized friend, and then steel yourself for what is going to happen on rena. when you get on your starship, you see that rena is actually fractured and unwhole, and see lenegis boost all of dahnas energy into rena, and see it start blooming a giant flower. after this, a bunch of red women teleport you to somewhere where they think youll die but you dont you get your ship fixed by a purple version of their true form and a bunch of runaway renans.
i think now is the perfect opportunity to explain alphens stupid yet funny backstory. the whole point of the slaves is to win a lord the title of sovereign for 7 years. this is actually all just a front for collecting magic to make rena whole again. The sovereign is actually a dahnan that they tried to make super strong and able to get the astral energy absorption shit right. alphen is actually the first of 2 sovereigns, and he is also 300 years old. the maiden (role that is only relevant after you learn all of this) was shionnes ancestor, and now is shionne. the fifth lord is also a sovereign but went crazy, and his maiden is a room of artificial life that hes been chained to, because the last maiden (shionnes ancestor) was too emotionally unstable and caused alphen to go nuts and kill a bunch of people.
after you learn literally everything, you go to rena and go through the least obnoxious final dungeon in tales of history, albeit way too long. the final boss is a materialization of renas astral energy (also known as energy earlier in this review) but after you fight him you actually fight the crazy guy! wowee! no you cant know how he got there. it is a complete and total cutscene boss. in the credits sequence you see alphen and shionne live together and get married in the last image. its cute.
for the postgame shit you can do a boss rush with the lords and the old fart where theyre all level 95-100, and a couple of really small dungeons with 3 bosses from the past 3 games, eizen, edna, and chronos. chronos is the easiest superboss ive ever fought, and a total exp bitch, so you just need to fight him 4-5 times and youre level 100. just spam double demon fang and dodge roll.
overall i legitimately loved this game, but will never replay it because not only is it a 70-80 hour jrpg, but also im scared i wont adore it as much the second time.

En cuanto a la historia es bastante predecible en su mayoría, tiene un girito interesante pero poco más, los personajes no me parecen nada del otro mundo y se repiten mucho, pero en grupo funcionan bien. Sistema de mejoras y mapas muy lineales. El combate y las animaciones son los mejores de la saga de lejos, pero como siempre los enemigos son algo repetitivos. Bosses MUY buenos. La música no destaca mucho y además está muy mal metida en las escenas.
Las cinemáticas son excesivas y muchas son innecesarias, al igual que los diálogos con npcs que, al llegar a cada zona, todos dicen lo mismo con diferentes palabras.
Creo que el final pega un bajón considerable e incluso podría haberse dejado a parte para hacer una segunda parte del juego mejor desarrollada.
En general el juego es muy disfrutable a pesar de los fallos que lleva arrastrando siempre esta saga, los gráficos ayudan bastante a dar sensación de amplitud a pesar de que son todo pasillos, pero como siempre en estos casos creo que se alarga demasiado y pasé de ver las cinemáticas enteras y leer todo a saltármelo en cuanto lo leí cada línea.

Story is solid but not mind blowing

Voice acting is top notch

Combat feels refreshing but main character has a couple moves that seemed way better than the rest so sometimes i just found spamming one move to be more effective than doing swag combos and stuff.

Some pretty cool boss fights but also some pretty forgettable ones

In some of the later dungeons I was having to do a lot of back tracking whenever I needed to heal.

art style very nice and rarely any fps drops on ps5 performance mode

there is a very large amount of vibration

As a long time tales fan, I really love this game. I do think the story has some pacing issues and some missed potential with its antagonist, but it delivered really well with gameplay and characters. The future is looking good for the series.

Tales of Arise came in just shy of a 9/10. It just wasn't quite enough.

There is a lot of greatness here. All the characters are likable and interesting, the combat system is by far the best the Tales of Series has ever seen and the OST is as good as ever.

However, in the second half of the game, it drops off a little bit.
... I dunno. The pacing is not quite as good, the story is not quite as concise and one can find moments of Anime Dumb here and there that are just not for me.

It's still a really great entry in a great series though, and totally worth your time.


Loved it, really got me back on track with the series after a good few years where I wasn't sure I liked it at all. Stumbles a little right at the very end, and I suspect COVID hit parts of this fairly hard, but I'm still really, really impressed with everything the team did here, and I can't wait to see what they do next.

this game deserves final fantasy xiii’s reception more than final fantasy xiii ever did

Great first half, second half fumbled but its still a good game

Tales of Arise is not a good game but it also isn’t a bad one.

Playing the game looks and feels great. Visually it’s stunning and is probably one of my favourite games visually ever. It controls well and has a wide array of customisation options in both button mapping and combat abilities. The combat system flows very well and has a lot of substance to it while still being incredibly flashy, sometimes too flashy. Casting artes can feel really clunky due to how long they take (Rinwell being the worst case of this because of her stocking system) but melee artes always feel responsive. The duo attacks are flashy and fun, and the only problem I can see with the battle system is CP.

Combat in Arise is so fun that I found myself fighting almost all overworld mobs I saw. Those fights don’t overstay their welcome and the break system allows you to juggle enemies into air combos and continue the beat down. I can’t say this for a lot of the boss fights though. For starters, fights with the human bosses are easily the worst combat encounters in the game seeing as they can’t be juggled into the air making a lot of your kit useless. Monster bosses don’t have this problem seeing as they’re large enough for your aerial combos to still land but both types of boss end up feeling like endurance matches since they can feel like real damage sponges. Despite the bosses feeling lacking the gameplay is still insanely fun and easily the strongest part of Arise.

The weakest part would be the story, which includes what happens in the story, how it’s presented and the characters. To put it bluntly, it’s messy. Sometimes the story is paced very well, other times things happen extremely fast, sometimes character arcs can be pretty heartfelt and other times whole arcs are offscreened. Skits are used to flesh out certain aspects of the story, characters and world but they’re presented in a very stiff and awkward way which makes then not enjoyable to watch and they pop up so frequently that I started to just ignore them. Several of them will be available a major cutscene to provide more to the things we learnt and while on paper that’s fine its also ridiculous that you’re prompted to engage with several stiff comic book style cutscenes right after an actual cutscene in a story that isn’t particularly exciting or interesting.

I got to when you beat the water lord and decided that there was really no reason to continue playing this game. After 30 hours I found most of the characters pretty lacklustre and the story was just okay. The gameplay is incredible but the boss fights are pretty ass. And to top it all off the OST is boring and forgettable and a bad OST is a JRPG cardinal sin.

Tales of Arise is disappointing and mediocre but I still had some fun playing it.

Alright ! so this being my first tales game I happily say I am a fan of this series and I have purchased many other tales game to now playthrough. There was a lot to like about this game from the characters to the story and the world. While I liked a lot about it there was a handful of things that bothered me throughout my playthrough of this game which primarily come near the end of the game.
THE BAD:
- AI partners are TERRIBLE they have no sense of the fight and make no effort to dodge anything or do anything leaving them to get one hit many time by bosses. I have heard people say this is a tales standard but that doesn't make it any better that there has been brain dead AI for this long in the series and still continues to be lol.

- The game begun to turn into a bit of a drag by the end with the story going all over the place and the ending feeling rushed due to this. I wasn't also a fan of the very long info dump near the end of the game it was so much info to take in at once.

- I do not like how CP does not replenish after fights.


But past these negative points I still found myself vastly in love with this world and its characters and still had a very fun time through it all past these bumps in the road!. I do highly recommend as I feel like you will get your moneys worth out of this title there is a lot to offer for the $60 price tag of the game.

Really enjoyed the story. The characters and their interaction within their group are the highlights of this game. The skits and voice events are so good and great for their relationship building.

'Tales of Arise' is the second 'Tales' game I’ve played, with a much older installment, 'Tales of Symphonia' being the first, so that’s the only one in the franchise I can compare 'Arise' to. That said, I am, by no means, a newcomer to the JRPG genre, I’ve had my fair share of great and mediocre titles, and with all that experience behind me, I’m confident to give a huge thumbs up in this review.

As with most JRPGs, Arise has a very engaging story and great characters, no question about it. Sure, veteran gamers will probably see some of the plot twists coming from very early on, but I think even they will be surprised once or twice by the time they reach the end. I think it’s cool how the writers managed to adapt to current times while maintaining the fantasy setting.

The combat mechanics aren’t perfect, but I’ve never been a huge fan of active battle systems in general, so don’t take my word for it. Some of the attacks look truly spectacular, though, I have to admit that. All in all, visuals, accessibility, music and voice acting are all excellent in my opinion, and the difficulty is just right, too – the main campaign is not super hard, but some optional bosses and quests are still quite challenging (and, of course, you can always replay the whole thing with a higher difficulty setting).

I, for one, would have loved if the developers had been just a little bit braver, maybe experimenting a little here and there instead of always sticking to the traditional, well-known formula, or making the story less linear… or maybe I’m just in a very nitpicky mood today.

To sum up, there’s hardly anything that 'Arise' does wrong, and I completely understand people who call this entry the new gold standard of JRPGs. Give it a try!

Good combat system but held back by boring encounter design. Bosses feel much too similar to one another, there are very few mobs, which causes the game to feel repetitive towards the end. The story, while promising and having some interesting moments, ultimately isn't very convincing and has structural issues. Defeating every lord comes across as too easy and not very worked for, which makes the stakes seem less convincing.

The graphics are beautiful, and the combat system is nonetheless fun when it doesn't feel repetitive. The characters feel sufficiently different from one another and the main romance is well developed and charming. A decent game.

thoroughly disappointing. combat is responsive enough but cluttered with effects which leads to a lack of readability and it is also full of uninteresting encounters. the narrative never quite figures out what it wants to be (if you've seen one such story about oppression in a fantasy setting, this does nothing to explore that beyond the surface) and turns into an absolute mess of an info dump in the 3rd half and to top it all of the characters never evolve past the blank cliches they are.

This review contains spoilers

Story starts out pretty promising, the villains are whatever. The same goes for it's themes. For something delving into slavery and racism it never explores them more than the usual "Renans aren't bad because they're Renans".
I liked the first 4 realms because they had unique takes on how the lords enforced their policies, realm 5 was one field and one dungeon, the "oppression" was a joke tbh and the Lord itself just became worse over time.
I didn't like the last 3rd at all, I never felt like there was enough of a mystery to Lenegis to make this loredump worth it at all. Maybe it would have worked as it's own game.
The gameplay is great, the soundtrack good to great and I enjoy the cast. The story is just really whatever thanks to the last 3rd of the game, so this isn't anything I'll revisit.

My first Tales of game and a very solid experience overall! Minus the plot dragging itself out a lot towards the end, I loved the fluidity of the combat, the excellent music and the strong relationships between the characters.

On an unrelated note, I would die for Hootle.

This review contains spoilers

This feels like the JRPG I have been trying to find for ages, constantly flittering about wanting exactly this experience but not finding a game that would satiate me. I suppose I hadn't seen much of Tales before this, but the little I did know (the Zestiria anime, the Crestoria short and about 20 hours of Berseria) was...less than positive. The initial trailers really piqued my interest for some reason though, and after finally getting the chance to play it, yeah, my initial impression was correct. I was overwhelmingly positive on this game. It felt like I haven't played such a cinematic game in a while, nor something as well-realised in world design. Arise fills the need for another Final Fantasy XII or Xenoblade style game that I've been craving for years. Turning on Auto mode for combat low-key gives it Gambits even!

The mix of hard sci-fi and fantasy is entirely my aesthetic. All the little places where it reminded me of Xenogears were great. Simply looking up at the sky and seeing those two planets looming overheard never stopped being cool, much like how I felt in FFVII Remake with the spectacle of the plates above. The game was incredibly pretty and never really stopped blowing me away with its set design. Soundtrack diversity could have been better but that's just the Sakuraba tbh. Gameplay was solid. I love the trend of doing away with time-wasting in modern JRPGs. For as much as I adore the genre, to be honest I find a lot of them aren't actually fun. There are a lot of times I feel like JRPGs are things I have to battle uphill in order to wrestle out the narrative as reward. But Arise was just a great video game.

great combat, horribly wordy and bad pacing. lost interest after 25 hours but completed it anyway because i have a mental disorder

This review contains spoilers

I don't usually do long reviews on this website because they're honestly a waste of time to me and I got better shit to do, but since this is a new installment in my favorite gaming franchise I felt like I needed to give my honest thoughts on it in actual detail instead of some semi-meme that I usually do.

So.
After playing through Berseria for the 3rd time this year, as well as Zestiria for the 4th, I wanted to go into Arise with as low of a fucking bar as possible. I like Zestiria. Combat blows though. I fucking despise Berseria. Combat is even worse than Zestiria's somehow. fast foward a few weeks after finishing Berseria again and the Arise demo comes out, and I actually enjoyed my time with it. Combat was a massive improvement over Berseria and Zestiria's, so my expectations now were along the lines of Vesperia's, meaning "The story might be ass but at least the combat will be fun."

Finished the game four nights ago, had a blast the majority of my time playing it. That's about all I asked of this game after being severely disappointed with Berseria back when it first released and it delivered.

Do I got issues? Some. It's not perfect. I wasn't expecting the combat to blow me away like the Xillia's did. I've already fully resigned myself into the camp that there is never going to be combat in this franchise as good as those two games ever again. But it is good for what it is. I'm so fucking glad they brought back air combos and just, air anything in general. Truth be told I do not see what this fanbase sees in the Graces style combat it is so fucking shit. The magnet boot, never leave the ground shallow combat that these guys for some reason hail as the best combat this series has to offer is mind blowing because I've played Graces twice now and I still don't get it. But I digress.

~Combat~


Combat in this game is very fun when you're not fighting a boss. Being able to juggle enemies in the air so that you can safely do damage while making cool combos is the kind shit I live for, makes the player feel smart and good. Especially when you're doing it with Alphen because man does that dude gets mad broken with his air stuff by mid game. Like he can do actual fucking infinites later. Kisara can too but it's like one arte she has and it's A DLC arte so uhhhhhhhh yeah. Don't Count. I think the bosses are kinda trash. Okay not think, they're hyper trash. In old Tales games (Not Berseria though because Berseria sucks obviously) you could actually, I don't know, combo the boss? Being able to style on bosses is pretty cool and would be nice to do that since the game teaches you "oh yeah we have this really cool interesting combo system." And then the bosses are just "yeah you know that shit we just taught you? Doesn't apply here." They boil down to "use quick arte, use Boost Arte if they're doing something that can be countered by one or if Alphen's is ready for a free knockdown. Are they knocked down? Do Blazing Sword charge attack for big damage. No? Well knock them down dumbass." I despise game design like this quit teaching me shit if the bosses don't fucking work that way. Bosses are supposed to be a knowledge check and test how well you know the game. If I can't combo bosses since they don't stagger and are just walking walls that I can only smack with my safe quick artes, have bloated giant ass health bars, and just overall aren't fun to fight, MAYBE DON'T DESIGN YOUR BOSSES THIS WAY? Don't even get me started on how every beast boss in this game is the same fucking fight, man. See that glowing weak spot?Only aim for that to do big damage on the boss until it breaks. If it breaks, keep wailing on the boss, it'll come back eventually. Just keep dodging the pattern-less, monotonous boss, bro. It's fun I swear.

The CP (Cure Points) system is this games way of balancing healing artes and making orange/pineapple gels actually important. Everytime you use a healing arte or an arte that cures ailments, some points are taken off this meter according to how strong the spell was. The higher the spell, the more expensive the cost is. I like this in concept, because now orange gels and the like are super expensive (like 3k gald a pop in a game where gald ain't exactly growing on trees until the midpoint of the game) and it keeps the spirit of the Technical Points system alive in a sense since artes take up souls off the soul gauge now (I'm just calling it this because it's the same dumb diamonds from Berseria and that's what it's called there). However the problem shows itself with the game's ludicrously stupid AI, which also branches into another problem I have with the game. Strategy in old Tales games was very simple and easy to use, but in this game now it's super complicated for no reason. I can't set any of my casters to just "stay away from enemy and cast spells." because you can't turn off normal attacks like you could in older games and just have them spam spells, so they will walk up to enemies and bosses and star wailing on them with close range attacks, putting themselves in danger for no reason. This is especially bad on bosses because the AI has absolutely no sense of self-preservation and they will walk into shit that evaporates their health bar. So what does the AI do when someone is near dead/dead? Heal/rez them of course. So all those points that you would like to keep for later for really bad situations get funneled into your dumb AI party. And trust me, the higher the difficulty in this game, the worse this situation becomes because this game bloats health bars and enemy damage the higher the difficulty is set, but your AI teammates are just as dumb no matter what level it is. Truly baffling.

I guess Boost Attacks are okay. They all serve the same purpose of knocking down the enemy but with different conditions. Like Rinwell's consumes enemy spells that she can then use against enemies which is cool, Shionne shoots flying enemies down, Law breaks armor, Dohalim slows the mobility of enemies who dodge a lot, and Kisara blocks charging enemies. Oh Alphen's? Uh. Yeah. It's kinda just walk up and hit them with boost strike. Nothing special really it's just "did you hit them? Okay cool. They're knocked down now." Again they're not bad but they come off more like a gimmick than anything else.

Boost Strikes are basically Vesperia's Fatal Strikes but with no added benefit to doing them other than "this instantly kills the opponent you're attacking." In Vesperia's it rewarded you by giving you back TP or something along those lines according to which fatal strike you did, but in Arise it's mostly just "fill up instant kill bar" and it's easier to fill up that bar the closer to death the enemy is. It's another gimmick but it helps get encounters done quicker.

Not really a fan of how Overlimit is handled in this game because it just feels like a regression. I think Hearts R was the last game in the franchise to allow you to pop Overlimit whenever you wanted in the vein of Vesperia, but in Arise they went back to the old school "take a bunch of damage and then it'll pop" which sucks because it gives me less control over my moveset. Because like all Tales games with Overlimit, Mystic Artes are locked behind it. Playing well like getting a bunch of perfect dodges also helps pop it but it's nowhere near as fast as just getting wailed on by the enemy. You're rewarded more for playing bad than doing good which is never a good way to design a game. Bosses popping Overlimit in old games usually meant that it was time to drop everything and start running since they became super armored and if you got caught in an attack string you were gonna get hit with a mystic arte (depending on the boss). But in this game most bosses' MA's aren't actually threats and are easy to dodge because they're AOE attacks with a large margin for error in avoiding. Dohalim's boss fight is probably the worst case for this. Only got hit because I got greedy attacking him not because it was hard to dodge the falling meteors he was casting. And since the bosses are all super armored beasts all the time now, popping OL doesn't instill a sense of dread or fear in me like in the old games since bosses don't combo you into oblivion if you get hit like back then. They're designed to have slower, easier to react attacks for the most part which makes them incredibly boring. Old Tales games it felt like more of a back and forth between you and the boss. Also doesn't help that OL also gives you and the boss higher defense which turns the already boring, bloated health bar bosses into even more of a chore to fight since they take less damage during the duration of their OL. And boy howdy, I hope you like fighting some of these bosses because you're gonna be fighting a shit ton of recolored beast bosses in the latter half of this game. Fucking kill me.

I do like the changes made to the core combat though. Again, gone are the days of Arte trees/Railroad artes/magnet boot combat. You can use whatever arte whenever you want, you don't need to spam quickstep to move through the movelist to get the arte you want faster, none of that dumb shit. We're in the land of good combat once again, lads. Normal attacks? We got those, chief. No more "Every attack is an arte" nonsense. No more strings, do whatever arte you want freely, but don't spam artes. This game has something called Proration where you see diminishing returns on attacks that you spam back to back where enemies will recover from the stagger sooner. To get around this you have to vary your combo a bit. Haven't used an arte in about 4 actions? It should be reset to it's base proration by that point. It's honestly not a huge deal because I regularly do loops with Alphen but it's a nice thought that they didn't want people just spamming artes on regular enemies and wanted them to learn the system. Wish they extended some of this wisdom to the bosses though????

Yeah I got issues with the combat. Is it good though? Yeah, bro. Shit's fun. I must reiterate how shit the Graces style games are man. How can you play the Xillia's, the R games, Vesperia, and this and think "oh yeah bro, Graces had the best combat in the series." Fuck outta here with that shit.


I dabbled with a few of the characters enough to have an opinion on the combat of the cast so I think i'll just go by one by one and keep it somewhat short.

-Alphen-

Alphen is obviously the easiest to play and master because he has to be, he's the main character, thus joining the ranks of "OP main character syndrome." this series has kept going since I think Xillia now because he's so strong with very little drawbacks. He's great at crowd control, great at air combos, can knockdown enemies with no real problem, he excels at everything he's designed to do. His only drawback is the Blazing sword because using artes from it hurts you, but it's barely a drawback since you can usually just tell Shionne or Dohalim to heal you by just picking the spell on the pause screen. He's pretty OP, but not Ludger OP. Nowhere close.

His artes are really cool and fun to use, too. I really like Swallow Blade, the animation paired with the particle effects that follow its two slashes never fail to just make me happy in a dumb "ooo shiny" kinda way. It's also like your first arte too so you get to use it the entire game. It's probably your best safe damage tool for bosses as well. Honestly not taking Alphen into a boss at all is just a dumb idea. The amount of damage he racks up from his Blazing Sword attacks when they're fully charged is so ridiculously huge that you're actively putting yourself at a disadvantage by not using him. Speaking of those Blazing Sword artes (they're called Flaming Edge attacks, by the way.) I'm honestly not a huge fan of them? Like they're incredibly useful but I like utility as well because some of them have too much wind up to be used in an actual combo without using a Boost Strike, so they're in a position where you only use them on downed opponents. The ones I do like are Searing Gale and Rending Flash because they can be used in combos and allow you to reset your enemies and basically cause pseudo-infinites by sacrificing a miniscule amount of health (as long as you don't charge them, that is.) Explosive Ring is probably his best FE for downed opponents because it's his longest multi-hitting attack and when fully charged for nearly all your health it does massive damage, but it's not easy to combo into. I also kinda like Rising Phoenix since you can combo into it but it's only really good as a combo ender so once you unlock Rending Flash or Searing Gale it becomes obsolete, along with Incineration Wave and Infernal Torrent for that matter. The only reason I would ever think to use them after getting the other half of his FE skills is that you really like those attacks. I also really like Dragon Swarm. It's not as cool as Yuri's in Vesperia. Hell, no version of it is, but I like the animation and particle effects going on with it. I think my other favorite arte of his is Void Flash, which is an air juggle attack that allows him to spawn a small tornado on his opponent which creates a bunch of interesting combo routes if used right. I love looping it with Hurricane Thrust. Alphen is your basic sword guy protag that we've had since the dawn of the series with Cress all the way back in Phantasia. Outside of the Blazing Sword he wouldn't really have much identity of his own in terms of moveset and combat but he's still fun to play.

-Shionne-

I probably would have played her more if she wasn't one of my two White Mage's which is a shame. Her moveset is very fun to play around with. Using her bomb attacks as some sort of pseudo-set play straight out of fighting games is really cool. Really love some of her artes too like Annihilation which is just this wide spread laser attack that just sweeps everything about 30 feet in front of her, and Aqueous Impact which is basically Acid Rain from Devil May Cry where it rains down bullets after shooting up into the sky. Explode and Flare Tornado are cool spells I love seeing her cast those. I do think that having to reload her bombs in order to use them on a continuous basis is a weird gimmick that was probably added to make her offense balanced but it really doesn't add much when you can reload and then roll cancel out of the animation to get back into the fight faster with full bombs. But all and all, she's honestly a really cool and fresh take on the White Mage character type. She's not the first gun user but she is incredibly unique in how she approaches combat.

-Rinwell-

Honestly didn't play Rinwell that much. She's a more traditional DPS mage type that also has some melee type attacks but she honestly wasn't for me. Her arte storing ability is cool and allows her to access higher level artes that she normally wouldn't have until they're unlocked later when you use the same spell as the one you had stored back to back. This mechanic also doesn't get negated when you do unlock the higher tier spells because doing the lower tier one twice might actually be faster than just doing the higher tier spell raw. She even gets skills later in the game that allow her to cast spells faster if she does them in the middle of combos which is extremely useful. Celestial Hammer is probably my favorite arte of hers because she just shoot lightning beams from high in the sky down onto enemies, and Electric Discharge which is just her exploding with even more lightning. Her air artes are honestly really cool but that's missing the point of being a mage, isn't it? Again she's not really for me, but I've talked with a bunch of people that find her really fun.

-Law-

I'm really mixed on Law. He's probably your worst up close damage dealer because all of his artes are either slow as hell and leave you open to enemy attacks but do decent damage, or they have garbage hit boxes so his combos regularly drop, especially on enemies with a heavier weight class. He also has absolutely zero crowd control skills outside of Whirlwind Snap which is also pretty slow, much slower than the version Jude uses in the Xillia's. He even has the self buff skills of lights showing up on his hands and feet for playing well just like Jude does. Honestly Law feels like a really bad version of Jude. Jude had crowd control, his artes were fast and relatively safe, and they had fucking utility. Jude's Whirlwind Snap could be used in the air as well as the ground and could be used for movement to get around enemies safely. Law, doesn't exactly have that. Jude was just better in every way. It's hard for me to like playing Law when I know a much better version of him came before in the form of Jude. Very High Risk/Low Reward in his design. Also he's voiced by Bryce Papenbrook which is....yeah.

-Kisara-

Man I love playing Kisara. Sure her fucking moveset is slow as shit and her artes are sometimes a chore to combo into because of how much wind up they have, but when they hit you FEEL that power behind this woman. I like a lot of her artes. Hurricane Slice (which is honestly just Swallow Dance) is pretty cool to look at and is probably your most reliable ground to air arte for her because Sadistic Descent can cause awkward hit box situations if done on certain enemies. I like the simplicity of Havoc Thrust just being a forward momentum kick in the air that gives surprisingly more juggle opportunity than I expected. Light Spear makes a return to the series, always nice to see and hers is also very good. She even gets an upgraded version of it called Blizzard Bloom which is an air to ground arte that is also pretty cool. She isn't even an air oriented fighter but her air combos are honestly still fun to pull off. I can go on and on about how much I love her artes. Tempest Wyvern with its sick mini tornado that raises enemies into the air, Inferno Crossing which makes a fiery X across your enemy, she's just so fucking cool man. I think the only problem I have is that a lot of her artes have huge wind up so getting a good amount of them to combo properly can be a bit of a chore. And her biggest sin is having without debate the worst version of Tiger Blade in the entire franchise. Another thing is that she's the only party member that doesn't dodge into attacks for perfect parries, she just RoyalGuard's her enemies which makes sense and all since she's lugging around a fucking door for a shield. She's mad fun. That's all I can really say.

-Dohalim-

Another case of "Man I sure would play you more often if you weren't one of my White Mage's." Because his actual offensive moveset is very fun. His perfect dodge allows his staff to elongate (shut up) so that he has a large hitbox and an easier time to combo opponents, which was basically lifted straight from Leia's moveset in the Xillia's. He's also got the problem that Law has where his hitboxes are a little wonky and his artes leave him open since a good amount of them are long and leave him exposed. The only thing that seperates them though is that Dohalim is actually good at crowd control. Crescent Flash spins his staff around and forms a tornado around him (a lot of tornado type moves in this game, huh?) which is good for situations where you're surrounded, Seismic Rupture as well since it also just kinda moves you out of harms way while clipping an enemy along with you. The simplicity of Catapult where he just throws his Staff at you and it spins back like a boomerang, pulling the enemy along with it is also cool. Eagle Rage is a good Air to Ground arte (which is also something he took from Leia) that is also good for moving around the map since it also has this unintentional glitch where if he lands awkwardly he will warp a long distance away from his original target with it. He has fairly standard Tales spells like Stalagmite, Air Pressure, etc. But I really like Execution because it's just a pillar of darkness that inflicts a good amount of damage when it lands. But I think my favorite arte of his is Sanguine Blossom which is just an incredibly long, flashy combo that ends with him forming a flower on an opponent that continually hits them while he turns his back on them. So unnecessary, so stupidly committal for no reason and I love it. I really wish I could play him more but not having a healer about on the hardest base game difficulty just wasn't a wise a idea.

- Combat Etc.-

Hey we got good Mystic Artes again. Okay well kinda. Not really a huge fan of the base MA's you get but I do think Dohalim's Tectonic Fission is really nice to look at despite how goofy the animation of him hitting the ground looks. I really like Alphen's 2nd MA Flaming Pillar: Pyre because of how hectic it is and the final flame pillar he sets while sheathing the Blazing Sword. But jesus fuck do not do that MA on a base PS4 it can barely handle it without the frame rate shitting itself. Not really a fan of either of Law or Shionne's to be completely honest. I like Rinwell's Aquarius Damnation since she just engulfs the field in a tsunami then calls down thunder into it. I just wish it ended with a more detailed explosion or something. I like both of Kisara's MA's, Final Prayer, her 2nd one, even more so than Flare Demolisher. Mostly because Final Prayer is just a savage beatdown with her mace before she fires a pillar of light down from the sky. Flare Demolisher isn't bad though, she basically enlarges her shield then causes an earthquake after she slams it into the earth.

This game has DLC artes and while they're cool for the factor that they're also references to older Tales characters (Kisara's Dazzling Spin hails from Flynn from Vesperia, Law's Flashing Savage Roar is a lightning version of Jude's Savage Roar, Shionne's Ray hailing from Raine from Symphonia, and Alphen's Howling Azure Storm which is a water version of Yuri's Azure Storm, and so on.) But some of these artes are a little...too good? Like kinda in a pay to win sense. Dazzling Spin is probably Kisara's best arte because it lasts longer than her attack animation thanks to the light pillar and has just enough hit stun for her to wait for the attack to end to reset into a new combo with no actual penalty unlike Alphen. Law's stronger artes that you earn in the game are either very long or have long start up animations but his Savage Roar is fast and strong at the same time. All of Alphen's DLC artes are strong, too. The only ones that are kinda balanced are the ones that were spells for Rinwell, Shionne, and Dohalim. I hope this doesn't set a precedent for the future because if it does I'm very worried.

~Story and Writing~

Damn Berseria was it really this hard to tell a decent story? Again I played Berseria and Zestiria again earlier this year to set my expectations for the game as low as humanly possible so I guess you can say what I expected out of the story was "Just be better than the last two games please" and honestly I don't even hate Zestiria's story but it's not great. The character interactions Zestiria had kept me hooked because the cast are just so fun to experience even if the overall writing around them is sub-par, which isn't exactly a praise I extend towards Berseria. However, good writing (for the most part) is a praise I will extend towards Arise because the writing is solid for the majority of the story. Like yeah it's honestly kinda easy to write a story where its main theme is "Racism/Slavery is bad" but the writing around this theme, which can be a bit cheesy at times, is told earnestly and with effort and the right amount of respect and tact the topic deserves. The worldbuilding of the realms is also top notch as well. The fire realm of Orbus Calaglia being an intensely oppressive giant slave labor camp with the intense heat constantly bearing down on Dahnan slaves, the portrayal of people's corpses being strewn around areas, the absolute despair the living feel while they toil everyday wondering if today is the day they finally keel over. It's fantastic. It establishes the Renan oppression over the Dahnan's so well. It's a great way to open the game. With each new Realm you discover different ways Rena has subjugated Dahna. Some with underhanded tactics where the Dahnan citizens will sell each other out for mere scraps just to get by like in Cyslodia, or through complete fear and brainwashing like in Ganath Haros. But I think my favorite realms are Elde Menancia and Mahag Saar. Elde Menancia being ruled by a Renan Lord who would rather not rule by fear, but show actual kindness to Dahnan's, which makes the only peaceful realm in all of the 5 realms. The problem is that this creates an underbelly of Renan Loyalists who work in the shadows to subjugate Dahnan's in their own way, unbeknownst to Dohalim. Mahag Saar is also cool because it also isn't another "Free the slaves" area because the slaves freed themselves already, but the damage done to their capital, Niez, and the power hunger the slaves feel proves that even the Dahnan's are capable of being just as cruel as the Renan's. It's too bad once you finish exploring the realms the second half of the game starts and the themes get dropped completely for a really bad twist, but I'll get there when I get there.

The overall character writing for Arise is...okay? Could be a lot better. Seems like half the cast got effort put in, and the other cast not so much, because a common complaint that I share with people is that characters like Law and Kisara get a short, quick character arc and then they're exactly the same and don't grow at all for the rest of the game, which is really disappointing. The same criticism can be lobbed at Alphen too, which is really bad seeing as he's the main character. In fact, I was kinda worried this would happen when I first found out Alphen was an amnesia character back in 2019 when the game was first announced, because amnesia characters have hardly any character, and their arcs usually revolve around getting those memories back to make them slightly more interesting than they are, but with Alphen he's probably handled the worst out of all the main characters in this franchise who did have "amnesia" like Luke from Abyss and Emil from Symphonia 2. Luke and Emil had amnesia (Luke not really but it's kinda the same plot line since he couldn't remember anything before his 10th birthday) but their characters grew in different ways outside of just being defined by their amnesia, which made them very engaging. But Alphen is solely defined by it because outside of that he's a boring good guy with incorruptible morals who only slightly doubts himself after getting his memories back because of what he remembered, but quickly gets over it. It might as well not have happened. It's very disappointing. But we have Dohalim, Rinwell, and Shionne around to pick up the slack for the other half since they actually grow and change throughout the entire story. It sucks too because Alphen's entire life has been completely ruined by the Renan's. He's a living relic. He's actually around 300 something years old because he's been in cold sleep since the original Sovereign trials because he was the only successful Dahnan to become a Sovereign before Vholran. And in learning why he had amnesia he remembers that during a ritual that would absorb energy from the planet of Dahna, he lost control and got so many people killed. This is the part where I start comparing him to Luke again because when something similar happened with Luke in Abyss it was handled and written so much better. When Luke's massive fuck up got an ENTIRE TOWN wiped off the face of the planet, he was kicking himself for it the entire rest of the game, his attitude changed completely. He was incredibly arrogant, self-important, and just generally unpleasant of a person before this happened, but he dedicated the rest of his life to trying to make the world a better place, slowly growing throughout the rest of the game after this. Alphen just kinda gets bummed for a bit, then gets over it because "oh fuck I gotta save Shionne, right." He's just so boring, man. Just play Abyss if you want a good version of Alphen's character arc.

Rinwell starts off overtly racist towards all Renans, acting with intense venom and vitriol towards both Shionne and Dohalim because of obvious reasons, and due to the fact that a Renan Lord, one of the main antagonists, murdered her parents in front of her. But as the game goes on she gets to know Shionne and Dohalim better and changes her ways, probably being one of the most active players in liberating Dahna and working for a path towards Renan/Dahnan coexistence.

Dohalim's character arc is a little bumpy but it still ends up in a good place. Dohalim may be a Renan, but Renan's aren't exactly strangers to oppressing even themselves, seeing as they have their own class system that's dictated by how strong of a magic user they are. Dohalim was born with a high aptitude for magic, but never really cared for being a Renan Lord or becoming a Sovereign, who leads the entirety of the Renan Race. He had aspired to be a musician with his closest friends, but had that ripped away from him. And as misfortunate as it is, in a battle to dictate who would be the next Renan Lord of Elde Menancia, Dohalim had to kill one of those said friends in self-defense, and having another vow revenge on him for it, mentally scarring him for life. It was these events that would lead him to be a just ruler of Menancia, but even he admits that it wasn't all out of the kindness in his heart, but to no longer hear the pained screams of slaves, as it reminded him of the friend he killed, and the pained wails of the one who loved him. This was all written pretty fucking well, right? Too bad you won't get the continuation of it for like another 20-25 hours of gameplay, where he reconciles with his friend and tries to be an actually selfless leader among the Renans to honor the memory of the friend he killed. The pacing on the character writing in this game can be pretty bad, unless you're Rinwell or Shionne I guess.

Shionne's arc is very basic but it has very well-written moments in it that make her stand out. She starts off very stand offish because of the fact that if people touch her, her body unleashes thorns that cause searing pain to said person who came into contact with her. But underneath her hardened exterior is a person who honestly cares about others, but is just never given an opportunity to because of those thorns. Her own brand of kindness is shown in how she noticeably stands away from people in cutscenes, or how she will always take time to heal people who are hurt when given the chance. She even helps Alphen come to terms with a friends death after getting rid of the lord who took their life. Her relationship with Alphen is very charming to see unfold, in the scenes where her and Alphen talk alone before going to sleep, she is still putting on the facade of being cold and hard to communicate with, but with a hint of that kindness shining through. Especially in the scenes where she tries to reach out to Alphen as he's the only person she can touch due to his being unable to feel pain. This comes full circle in the scene where Alphen gets his memories back and tries to save her from being kidnapped. At that point in the story, they're used to being able to touch one another, but with Alphen's memories returning, so too does his sense of pain. When Alphen recoils from feeling the first pain he's felt in ages, Shionne mentally breaks as the only person she was close to shows fear at her curse, and lets herself get kidnapped. It's such good shit. I can go on and on with how well-written she is, but this shit is already long enough as is.


The villains are BLAAAAND. None of them stand out. The things they do are heinous yeah but, like, that's what villains are supposed to do, bro. they're one dimensional to the very last, and the big twist "villain" is fucking awful. Vholran is the only noteworthy one worth talking about because he's in the same boat as Alphen. They're both Dahnan's that were taken from their lives and forced to be used as experiments to become Renan Sovereigns, because the main dividing point between Renans and Dahnan's is that Renan's can use Dark Magic, and Dahnan's can use Light Magic. Renan's absorb Astral Energy (mana) from Dahnan's as a part of the Crown Contest to dictate new Sovereigns. But this is a part of the twist where the Crown Contest is just a ploy to absorb Astral Energy for the REAL big bad, since all the Renan Lords are just pawns in a greater scheme. None of them in history have ever become a Sovereign, only Dahnan's can. and in 300 years, only two people have successfully been experimented on to become one. Alphen and Vholran. Alphen is the Sovereign who is righteous and just, while Vholran is the Sovereign who is wicked, corrupt, and sees people as tools, whether they're Renan or Dahnan doesn't matter to him. It should create an interesting clash in their ideologies as Dahnan's subjected to the cruelest types of punishment for some twisted game made by the Renan's, but their opinions on life were drastically changed by them in different directions. But that doesn't ever really happen. You never get a real explanation as to why Vholran became that way, and Alphen and him never have a conversation where they argue about their ideals, which would have made for some actually good character writing for the both of them. It's a very odd direction for this game where back story is everything to their character writing, to the point where it's some characters only writing.

The Helganquil. The Planet Rena itself. Those are the true, twist, big bad of the game. And I hate it. I hate it so much. The Helganquil are the true denizens of Rena. The Renans you know throughout the entirety of the game, aren't really Renans. Shionne, Dohalim, the lords, none of them are. They're Dahnan's. They're Dahnan's whose ancestors were experimented on centuries ago in a large ploy to absorb the planet of Dahna of its Astral Energy. The fake Renans live on the satellite of Lenegis. Somehow nobody ever bothered to ask "Hey does anyone actually live on our home planet?" Why, pray tell, is this happening? Because the actual planet of Rena is basically dead. The game will establish in the second half that planets have wills of their own. It takes form in the Astral Energy the planet has. Rena is dying and has barely any energy left, so its will awoke because it concentrated in a specific spot where some of its life still exists to an extent, desperately clawing for more energy to keep itself alive, and the closest planet it could drain was Dahna, its sister planet. Dahna's will exists, but has no sapience because the planet isn't dying. It only develops that once it starts having its energy drained and it all gathers at the point where it's being sucked up. The will of Rena is the whole reason why Lenegis exists. It subjugated the Helganquil to do its bidding, it told them to kidnap Dahnan's and turn them into "Renan's", it created the Sovereign/Maiden program that ruined Alphen's life and created Shionne's curse, and is the sole reason behind why Renan/Dahnan hatred exists. It's fucking terrible. The theme's the game has brilliantly written throughout the entirety of the game, have now been completely thrown aside for this incredibly stupid twist. All those hours getting you to care about the plight of Dahnan's, the cruelty of the Renan's, all of it. It was all because of a planet. Not because Renan's thought themselves to be superior, but because of a literal planet. The planet couldn't have been dying out because of the arrogance the Renan's have? And no, don't use the "Well if we did that it would just be Xillia again" excuse because we are LONG past the point where this series lifting creative ideas from older games is a big no no. Xillia lifted ideas, Vesperia did it, Symphonia did it. We've been doing it for a long time, guys. I don't care. It would have made more sense and been in line with the themes you were writing. You fucked up. Hard.

~Closing Thoughts~

Despite the issues I have, I do like this game a lot. Ever since this game was announced I have been dreading its existence for a solid two years now. Berseria fucked me up, dude. Not even Graces could put me into full blown doomer mode because I know we got 2 of the best games in the series right after it. But the combination of Zestiria's garbage combat, and Berseria's garbage everything instilled in me this perpetual anxiety for Arise. And not gonna lie, it's not completely gone. I will continue to worry about every future installment in this franchise to some extent due to how fluctuating the quality of these games can be, but at least it won't be anywhere near as bad as it was in the four year time span between Berseria to Arise. I'm glad I can like this game. I really am. I was able to reclaim a bit of that childlike wonder I had towards Xillia when I played it for the first time when I was playing Arise. There was a point where Shionne, Kisara, and Rinwell were all just talking with each other and enjoying one another's company where it hit me that "Man, this is why I love Tales." The endearing characters, the fun combat, the creative worlds, that's Tales for me. And Arise delivered.

-Etc.-


This is pretty much the conclusion of the review. I might go back to add more later if I feel like it but this shit took way longer than I expected because I had a lot to say, but tried to keep it somewhat brief. I love the graphics. Best a Tales game has looked. The hop to Unreal Engine 4 was a smart move. Too bad the game has performance issues on base ps4's (which I played this on) and has pop in issues, but honestly pop in is just how mid-tier jrpg's roll now. If it bothers you then im sorry but you're stuck with it. I wish areas were more interesting to traverse. The hallway simulator is still strong with this series. They desperately need to bring back puzzles for dungeons and shit to make the game feel not as monotonous because relying solely on your combat to make people engaged really only works with traditional action games more so than ARPG's. Sidequests are boring and uninteresting still since a lot of them are either fetch quest or fight boring beast boss. Fishing is fun in small doses. Getting to stare at Kisara's perfectly sculpted ass is always a plus. bring back more interesting unlockable outfits instead of recolors and locking cool outfits behind paid DLC, and stop advertising DLC to me in game. That shit is mad annoying.

And finally: Hibana is a fucking banger and I won't hear any different.


KEEP THE FLAME ALIVE.


Jogo muito bom, o ponto alto são as batalhas. Não espere muito da história. Há outros jogos da série com histórias mais profundas e elaboradas, porém está tem seu chame! Recomendo!

i dont know a shit about tales games but this has women and i like women so its good

This game has extreme PS1 JRPG energy, and I can't quite put my finger on why exactly that is. Might be a combination of the great environment design, backloaded pacing, and general subject matter. Can't quite nail it down, but that's not a bad thing, cuz PS1 JRPGs are raw as hell.

Tales of Arise? More like Tales of Arises to disappointment. This a good game but it wasn't as good as I hoping it to be. Tales of Arise is the best reviewed game on Metacritic since Symphonia. And since Symphonia is my favorite Tales game. Needless to say that got me excited but unfortunately the game kinda falls kinda flat to me.

On the positive side I think this game has the best combat in the entire series. It feels like a more modern version of the older games. While throwing away some of the trash idea's from Berseria's combat. It's really fun without feeling too button mashy or mindless. I also do feel like the dungeon design is a bit of improvement from Berseria, Zestiria, and the Xillia games. Graphically this game is really pretty with wonderful detailed environments. The game is also smooth. It just feels great move around in.

The problem for me when it comes to this game is the story, characters, and music. Motoi Sakuraba comes back again yet again doing yet another bland and forgettable OST...Go Shiina where did you go :(

The cast sucks. The only character I like is Rinwell. The rest I find bland and boring. There just not interesting. I feel like they lack the humorous bantering and bickering of past Tales games. Lacking in fun chemistry. The cast falls apart when compared to past Tales games. Like I may like Rinwell but she's literally just worse Rita. Shionne I find to be a pretty boring main girl especially coming off of Berseria which had Velvet. But even in comparison other Tales main girls like say Colette, Chloe, Milla, Mint, or Tear...she just sucks. I don't see how Kisara is any more interesting than other "mother" like Tales character like Raine. Law being voice Bryce Papenbrook you can exactly guess what kinda character he is. So annoying. Tales games don't usually have a good track record of great main characters but like Alphen is even more bland and more boring than usual. Again compared to main characters like Lloyd, Luke, or Yuri. And he's just not as interesting. And Dohalim is just there. I honestly can't think of much to say about him. I also just don't care much of the character design of the cast.
Kousuke Fujishima where did you go... :( Anyway the point is I find the cast to be easily one the weakest in the entire series. I honestly like Zestiria cast more than this game. Tales of Arise has great voice acting though Probably some the best in the series.

The story is probably the weakest part for me. I just think it takes itself way to seriously lacking much in lighthearted moments. Not only that but plot itself just isn't all that interesting. It's like a worse version of Eternia. Ok so you take that plot line from Eternia where theirs Celestia and Inferia and they kinda hate each with years of resentment. And then crank up the seriousness for some reason and also make it the only plot point. Then add a dumb twist at the end that comes outta no where in a boring exposition dump fashion. The plot is "fine" at best and no where near as good as past entries like Symphonia or Abyss.

I want to be clear. I actually like the game. I still had a lot of fun playing it. But when I'm given the expectation this is one the best entries in the series...you know I want to like it as much the other best entries in the series. It's a good game on it's own. But I don't see it as one of the best Tales games in the series. It's game play sure. But it's story and cast drag it way down for me. Because of that I can't in good conscious give this game a higher rating than like a 7.5. rating.




This review contains spoilers

[Written after defeating the fifth lord, Vholran - haven't beaten the game yet]:

Dungeons are extremely linear with zero thought required to blindly stumble through them, there are no puzzles whatsoever, side branches for items are very obviously placed. The racism and slavery themes come off really corny. The combat is merely serviceable, gets kinda old fast (I'm still gonna play on Hard until I beat the game though out of sheer stubbornness). The world is beautiful at least, and as far as characters go Rinwell is my favorite, she's very likeable and sympathetic. I don't much care for the rest; Alphen is bland but acceptable, however Shionne's cold, tsundere front really overstayed its welcome. There is a slight overreliance on skits for dialogue, though most of them are decent.

As of now the game is a very light 6/10, maybe 5/10. Symphonia and Berseria had much better stories and characters. Oh yeah, the English voice acting is fantastic is another positive.

[Finished the main story and almost all side content]:

Yeahhh, the first half was significantly stronger than the second in most aspects. Story becomes extremely JRPG save-the-world generic toward the end. I like the happy ending tho (even if it feels rushed and asspulled). Oh yeah, the overdependence on skits got really severe, and most of them were rehashes of what characters have already discussed before... For the 1000th time our gang has realized slavery and racism are kinda bad!!

Solid 5/10 game. Rinwell's easily the best character, Alphen really started to feel preachy and repetitive by the end, very much your generic faultless good guy. Really makes me appreciate Lloyd and Velvet as Tales protagonists.

(should also be noted I p worded the game so had access to all the expensive ass DLCs, most of which I happily used except the OP level boosts)

Did some post-game content the day after beating the main story but lost interest after a couple hours, gonna stop and uninstall here.

Fun story, lovable main cast of characters, great gameplay. Nails the presentation, the music, the visuals, etc. Especially when it comes to art style, Arise has one of the most inspired, beautiful styles I've seen in a game. Ufotable on point with the anime cutscenes too. Pacing is very solid, for the most part. The world is fairly linear, but I don't mind it because you're rarely wasting a bunch of time walking through empty space, and if there are branching paths, there's almost always something worth finding down those paths. Combat was always a fun time because of how smooth and satisfying it felt. I mained Alphen for the majority of the game, but other characters like Rinwell have fun kits too.

If I had any complaints, I'd say the enemy/boss quality is a bit all over the place. For the majority of the game, I'd be cruising along tearing through enemies without issue, only to run into a boss that'd wipe my party. In the latter part of the game, the enemies also tend to have more bloated HP pools, so that's not ideal. However, it never became so much of an issue that it brought down the experience as a whole. Other nitpicks would be missing the traditional 2D portraits for skits, which I thought had more personality than the 3D models, and the lack of the results screen, with all silly fanfare. Like I said, they're nitpicks, but I did miss them being in the game.

Overall, I'm very happy with Arise. Enjoyed it from beginning to end, despite my gripes, and I'm looking forward to tackling some of the post game content.

Full video review: https://youtu.be/RNviwNIDdQs

This is my first Tales of game, so I will not be making any comparisons here. Rather, I’ll be looking at it from a first-timer’s perspective.

Combat:
Having played Scarlet Nexus earlier this year, I couldn’t help but get the same feeling when playing Arise. As in, for everything good the game does, there’s usually something bad to match. This is demonstrated perfectly by the combat. The combat here plays out in real-time, putting you in little arenas whenever you run into an enemy. The combat is also very fast and I would say it’s comparable to the latest Ys games.

However, unlike those games, it is WAY more combo-focused. This is the kinda action JRPG where you are regularly landing 100+ hit combos, doing damage in the six digits, and utilizing an entire party to accomplish that goal. Sounds like a lot, but Arise does this really well. You get your base attack string and then a mountain of skills that can be strung together to come up with some really cool combos.

This aspect of the game was solid. It felt great to fly around, dodge enemy attacks at the perfect time, and then unleash these massive combos and string them together with all the different character abilities. That said, the combat is not perfect. For example, it's often hard to tell what is going on. This is only really noticeable later in the game, but you will have so many flashy moves and abilities flying around the screen that it becomes hard to differentiate between what is an enemy’s attack and what is one of your ally’s attacks.

Damage Sponging:
My biggest problem also lies in the combat: its overuse of damage sponging. Normal enemies and most random encounters – fine, but bosses? You’ll do some mega combo and barely dent its HP. Yes, bosses are supposed to be more difficult, but Arise’s bosses border more on tedious than challenging. I’ll be able to perfectly dodge all of a boss’ attacks – removing much of the challenge – but have to spend 15 or so minutes whittling away at its HP using moves that are so flashy you would think they would do more than 3% of its HP.

You can’t stun these bosses like you can regular enemies either, so that only drags the fights on longer – and this is with me playing on normal difficulty and being within the same couple levels as the bosses, I can only imagine how much more tedious they would be on hard. The difficulty scaling is just way off here, with most regular enemies dying before I can even finish a regular combo, but most bosses being these massive sponges that take forever to down.

Exploration/World Design:
As for exploration, Arise does a pretty good job. The game world is this massive, interconnected thing with plenty to explore. You’ve got these wide-open valleys with random encounters and treasure scattered about, cities with numerous NPCs to talk to, and of course, dungeons with their branching paths and loot to find. It doesn’t go too crazy (and even gives you the map up front for each area) and I liked the overall balance there. You’re not spending time aimlessly wandering about, but you’re not on this straight path towards the objective either – at least, most of the time.

Story:
Again, this is an area Arise has both its pros and cons in. For example, I liked how it was quick to get going. You’re thrown right into this adventure without the need for this massive buildup and info dump at the beginning. That doesn’t mean the game is without its info dumps though. In fact, this is something I didn’t like about the story: it’s entire final act.

Basically, for the first 60-70% of the game, you’re on this big adventure with a clearly-defined fantasy motif. It develops naturally, not really going beyond the norm for the genre, but being interesting enough to keep me playing. Then, in traditional JRPG fashion, the final act goes completely overboard, becoming this massive, overblown thing with way too many layers for its own good. There will be some big revelation and then 20 minutes later, another one and repeat again and again. Instead of going “wow, that’s an interesting twist”, it was more so of a “I guess that’s a thing now.”

Still, that is but a fraction of the main story. For the rest of it, it’s mostly fine – with the characters being a notable highlight. They’re not the most well-developed bunch, but the game has this cool “conversation” feature where, whenever something notable happens, you have the option of entering an optional dialogue amongst the party. They don’t last too long, but they provide more details on why characters act the way they do and why the game world is in the state it is. Nothing too fancy, but a nice breather when you’re exploring.

Length:
All in all, the game took me just under 40 hours to clear. It’s a bit longer than I was expecting – and it probably would have been even better if it was expended beyond that to build up the finale more – but it’s a decent length for a JRPG regardless. If you’re a completionist, you can squeeze out another 20 hours or so to get that 100%.

Graphics/Music:
Unlike the combat and story, this is an area that pretty much has no faults. The aesthetic is nice, there’s a lot of detail to the game world, the character designs are cool, and I liked the inclusion of 2D animated cutscenes for the more climatic moments in the story. It has an equally nice soundtrack to match too. Each area has this epic orchestral theme and it honestly kinda reminded me of Skyrim – definitely a soundtrack I’ll listen to outside of the game.

PC Performance:
The game is solid and runs flawlessly at 1440p 60+ fps on my aging 1070 Ti. I hovered mostly around 80-100 fps with maxed out settings and did not have any issues with bugs, crashes, freezing, or really any technical issue at all. The only thing noteworthy there is that the game has some REALLY low draw distance, the kind where shadows and objects pop into existence way later than they should.

Overall:
Tales of Arise is a decent JRPG all things considered. The combat is fast, fluid, and fun, but comes with the downside of some very damage spongy bosses. The story is engaging and has some interesting characters, but comes with the downside of a rushed and overly ambitious final act. While not the best JRPG to release this year, it is one I had a good time with and would recommend to others into the genre – especially if you want a more action-oriented take on it.


With shallow, unresponsive combat and bad enemy design that has you spending the whole game fighting walls of armor that rarely respond to being hit, from the onset it's already not a good Tales game, nor is it even good on the merits of the more typical 3D action RPG it abandoned the series' core to be. If you look outside the combat, however, there are things to like, or at least at first. The story is alright and the environment design is a step up from what Tales has been doing for years (the dungeon design, however, is not). Those things all get worse as the game goes on until you reach the irredeemable late game and struggle to continue giving a shit, between the story falling apart, the game's already heavy reliance on recolors of otherwise recycled enemies becoming even more prominent, and the asset recycling creeping into dungeon design with lots of copy/pasted rooms that maybe will be recolored. And don't even get me started on how they locked artes and their associated skill trees behind DLC costumes, or shit like the $16 Sword Art Online DLC

this disappointed me more than my own father

Pretty good. I think the combat balance is a little off, especially for melee characters, but the ranged ones were fun enough for me that that issue didn't really impact my personal enjoyment.
Story is good. It has a lot to say on the nature of oppression and racial divides, and for the most part it works. The characters are charming enough to get you to care about them, though the overall narrative is pretty standard JRPG (and Tales especially) fare. The skits are strong as always and are worth listening to.
This is the first Tales game I was able to actually finish, and I think that scores it a lot of points. Worth your time.