One of the best Mega Man games, and the best one of the NES

Extremely good but not as much as people say. A rare case of "definetely overrated, but still amazing". Some parts of the game were a slog, and the camera is often really clunky, but you have to respect this game for what it accomplished and innovated in the videogame world.

Loved this game. Story is really interesting and unique, the characters are well written and the gameplay is really good. Also, recruitable Black Frost? 10/10

One of the best JRPGs out there. Amazing combat and story, good "plot twist" that I wasn't expecting at all. Also it has Walter.

Kind of short, best played at 2x speed, but still an enjoyable experience. You can make broken characters, but the personalization isn't as strong as FFT.

Not as good as 9 but still a blast to play. Playing as Bass is a blast

Mega Man Battle Network is already peak media as a series, but MMBN5 is probably the best game in the series. The story is a bit more edgy but one of the best ones, gameplay is almost the best it has been (BN6 is better in this regard. Chips are better balanced and Crosses are more usable than Double Souls) and the liberation missions are amazing, their only downside is there aren't many of them in the game. The more I play this game, the more I like it

I love the graphics, but the game felt much slower than the NES games. Still enjoyable though.

A bit sluggish, but you got to respect the game for what it created. The Yellow Devil fight, without abusing glitches, is still one of my favorite boss fights ever.

It introduced Proto Man, and I'm grateful for that, but everything else in the game is painful. The lag is atrocious. I can understand the appeal, mostly because of nostalgia, but for me it felt extremely overrated.

Not much in the way of innovation, but a good game regardless.

Great ending to the first trilogy. Style change + Navi Customizer makes for great personalization. The story is great (for MMBN standards), backtracking and fetch quests are still here, but much less compared to MMBN1 and 2.