Bio
I'm here to force my opinions on you and make you play Merry Skelly
Personal Ratings
1★
5★

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2 Years of Service

Being part of the Backloggd community for 2 years

Noticed

Gained 3+ followers

Liked

Gained 10+ total review likes

Gamer

Played 250+ games

N00b

Played 100+ games

Favorite Games

Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky
Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth
Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth
Mary Skelter 2
Mary Skelter 2
Bravely Second: End Layer
Bravely Second: End Layer
Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth - Hacker's Memory
Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth - Hacker's Memory

341

Total Games Played

000

Played in 2024

162

Games Backloggd


Recently Played See More

Slow Damage
Slow Damage

Apr 29

Fire Emblem Engage: Divine Edition
Fire Emblem Engage: Divine Edition

Feb 25

Omori
Omori

Jan 19

Pokémon Violet
Pokémon Violet

Nov 21

When the Past Was Around
When the Past Was Around

Jun 26

Recently Reviewed See More

Hands down my favorite fire emblem game to date.

You get supports that focus a lot on character growth, helping each other overcome difficulties, rebuilding ones image and home, as well as acknowledging weaknesses and showing a drive to chase improvement. It warmed my heart to see all the characters of different ethnicities and upbringings come together like a found family and (not necessarily only fight for a common cause but to) enjoy, celebrate, and help each other experience different aspects of each other's culture.

Mika Pikazo's designs are flawless in their storytelling. From the little discolored blemish on Diamant's hair (to reflect that of an imperfection in a diamond) implies that he isn't as "perfect" as everyone praises him to be. To the stitches and bandages on Panette's wrists and dress to signify she was neglected similarly to how a child outgrows a toy and forgets it after time- leaving it to decay. Finally, Alear's different colored hair having an important story element is also another reason I adore these designs and the amount of storytelling done through silence.

One thing that I always disliked the most about fire emblem games was the combat, and I never found myself willing to grind every support. Although, I happily loved grinding supports this time around. The rings, abilities, how you unlock them (and the unbreakable weapons thank GOD) really gave you a lot of room to do whatever you want with the characters.

Overall, if you want a consistently good experience with a lot of neat foreshadowing, subtle storytelling, and a lovely found-family cast- this is the perfect fire emblem game for you! If you prefer characters fight and argue about ideals... go play FE9 or FE10! This is a gorgeous and lovingly crafted game where I feel the character designer (Mika) was a perfect fit for the story that was conveyed.

Every character has supports with every emblem you get (even DLC) so you are 100% guaranteed dialogue between your favorite characters. There's bonus dialogue for the DLC fights if you fight each DLC emblem with their in-game counterpart (ie: ike with soren, corrin with camilla, lyn with hector etc). There's just so much attention to detail here that's truly amazing and fun and will give you interactions you never really knew you needed.

An amazing love letter to the whole fire emblem franchise.

Please, give it a chance and ENGAGE!

I genuinely could not have been more excited for this game. I felt so nostalgic seeing the titles switch back to colors, both legendaries looked equally as stunning, and the new features seemed genuinely useful and fun even in competitive. Coupled with some lovely characters (Arven, and a number of teachers) why am I rating it only half a star? I'd honestly rate it 0 if I could.

I'll tell you what I love about it. I love the fact that when you hover over the pokemon in the wild to scan them with your pokedex, you can tell which pokemon are actually dittos or zoruas in disguise. I love the fact you can bathe, talk, walk, and explore with your pokemon and even quick battle with them. I love the ability to explore the mountains, the sea, and the sky just like we did in Pokemon Arceus. There is so much I actually love about this game, and I wish I could keep saying nice things about it-

if I was able to play it.

I bought it on launch, and I finished it maybe... a week after I got it. It was one of the worst gaming experiences I've ever had, and it's for reasons that should not have left this huge a gash in my review, but it did.

0/5 My game crashed almost every 5 minutes. I turned the auto-save feature off because I enjoy saving manually when shinyhunting and training, so that made the game a lot more frustrating.

0/5 I was unable to actually enjoy the final fight in the pokemon league because the theme LOOPED the first few seconds and was only patched after I already completed the game. My friend commented "im so glad I played the league after they patched the music" and I remember replying "wow, must be nice".

0/5 It's all "Haha, funny glitches" online until you happen to get stuck in one area and freeze until the game crashes. At times, I'd glitch into walls and objects (like the floor) with Miriadon, and he'd just float for 5-10 seconds until the game blackscreened and sent me back a distance away from where I glitched. All good, right? That would be fine if it happened a handful of times, and if all instances were as simple as a blackscreen, but most of the time, the game would crash.

0/5 Unless you speak with Arven, you will not unlock any of the things needed for Miriadon to explore the world effectively, such as rock-climbing, swimming, and flying. Arven was the last route I did. I finished the pokemon league, penny, and only then realized Arven gives me power-ups for my dragon. Which brings me to the next point-

0/5 For a game that felt proud to say "make your own journey" I've never felt like I've played a game wrong until Pokemon SV. It feels like I was punished by "choosing my own journey" aka- I played by what I loved doing the most, collecting pokemon, shinyhunting, and exploring. I faught the gym leaders based on who I was most excited to see, so I started with Rhyme and Grusha. I did the same with penny, which means I started with Ortega and Eri. As you can tell, I played the game mostly "backwards" but because the map doesn't work like it does in classical pokemon games, your road isn't linear, which means I genuinely had no idea what gym or boss I was supposed to fight first. But as I was told in the trailer- that shouldn't matter, because you can pick to do whatever you want!... No, you really can't.

By doing things out of order, you trigger scenes that normally shouldn't/would not trigger as early as they want you to. By the time I finished fighting Ortega, I already knew everything about team Star because they explain everything after his fight, which makes it even more offputting when the last person I fought was Mela. I didn't seek to play this game backwards or in a messed up order. I was going by who I liked the most and what/who I found most interesting, and I LOVED Nemona! Unfortunately, the only main side character student with any substance to their name is Arven, who actually got a plotline with character growth.

3/5 This is the least of my concern, but still a big one. I've never once complained about lag (and I've played old school Destiny with a very shitty router at the time that disconnected very frequently during PVP, and I STILL never complained about lag or how slow my game was running) so, when I say "the lag was bad" I mean- the game was absolutely unplayable. I mean, the lag was so bad that the music would slow down with the game, and my pokemon would fall very, very, very slowly if I jumped off cliffs. Soon after, the game would crash. There were times where I just put the game down in frustration and considered not finishing it at all because it became unplayable.

For reasons I'd rather not mention, Pokemon is a comfort franchise. I'm incredibly easy to please, and while I don't praise all the pokemon games as masterpieces or perfect (by far, there only is one perfect pokemon game and it's PMD EOS) I at the very least ENJOY the journey in every last one of them. I have fun. I escape from what makes me sad and I play pokemon like I'm 10 years old again. It's one of the few joys that I always have. If I want to have a good time? Mindless little fun? Play a pokemon game, any pokemon game. They're cute, they're fun, they're relaxing, they're usually full of many cool things you can do. If you don't like doing 1 thing, you can do another 5 that you do actually love.

But it just wasn't possible with this game.

I couldn't fight the gym leaders because the game would freeze and it would crash. I couldn't catch pokemon because when I escape from battle in a crowded area, 6 other pokemon swarm me and make it impossible to get out until the game crashes. I can't surf or fly because the lag makes it hard to see, and eventually, the game crashes. I can't move from point A to point B fast enough, and if I do happen to go a little under 50fps by some miracle, rest assure, the game will crash again.

I'm a shiny hunter. Finding shinies was not fun.

I thought i'd enjoy the new shinyhunting method.

I couldn't.

Because by the time I got the shinycharm, I'd already encountered all the shinies I wanted by random in the wild. Sometimes, multiples of the same shiny. At one point, I swore to my friend, "if I can throw all these shinies away just to have the game run normally without crashing for 1 day so I can actually complete it, i'd do it without hesitating".

"Ok, we get it, the game sucks, whatever."

No, that's not what this is. The game DOESN'T suck. The characters are charming. The plot was interesting. The ideas were worth exploring and developing on.

The issue here is that there was no possible way for me to actually enjoy it. Not because I didn't try, but because the gaming experience was just so frustrating and awful.

Pokemon games have made me cry before (happy tears, sad tears) but this time, I actually cried out of frustration. This game really broke something in me. I didn't expect much. I just wanted to have a good time. I didn't expect perfect story, perfect characters, and you know what really sucks? I would have adored this game had I been able to play it as intended. I love the idea of a professor so obsessed with their work they become the final boss. I love tech and past and time travel. I love seeing characters grow closer with pokemon like Arven. This. THIS should have been my FAVORITE pokemon game.

And yet, it's the worst thing I've ever played.

I'm a completionist to a fault. I got the pokedex, got the useless shinycharm I never got to use, and never went back in to re-challenge the gym-leaders because the lag was not worth it and there was nothing the game could offer me to make it worth 15 crashes in 30 minutes.

Not angry. Just sad.

Just sad and disappointed.

Went through this game with my friend and I would give it 5/5 stars if I wasn't an utter chickenshit when it comes to jump scares.

If you enjoy a game with heart-warming characters, plot twists, psychological horror, and the joys and sorrows of growing up, sharing secrets, hiding secrets, and growing out of friendships- this game is perfect for you. Just thinking about the cast makes me want to cry.

Out of all the indie games I've played and experienced, this one by far takes the cake for one of the best wrapped up bittersweet endings.

Like I said, if I wasn't utter chickenshit, it'd be a 5/5, but since I am, indeed, fried chickenshit, I can only rate it 4.5/5 as I had my eyes closed or filled with tears the other 0.5% of the time.