A really cool idea but this first entry sure is rough around the edges.

Fun, but sadly riddled with bugs.

Unironically the best game in the series.

Trillion is what I would consider to be "double-niche", as it is a mish-mash of (mainly) two genres: SRPG and Raising Simulator. About 80% of this game is navigating menus and reading the VN-style cutscenes as you train and raise Affection with the Overlord of your choosing (at least for the first 3, the rest after that are in a set order). The other 20% is mystery-dungeon-like gameplay where you navigate on a grid through the Valley of Swords for training or to fight Trillion; anytime YOU move, the enemies will make a move of some sort as well, each move you make being a "turn."

For your very first run, I'd STRONGLY encourage you to forego any sort of guides and just do it blindly and take your best whack at Trillion that you can, because while there are various ways to go about defeating him, there's a pretty easy way to do it that will suck all the fun out of trying all sort of different playstyles. I had originally played this on the PSVita and, after my first run or so, could no longer play it due to it crashing all the time. I picked it up again on Steam and I'm pretty glad I did. In addition to the bugs from the Vita version being next-to-non-existent, I thoroughly enjoyed the story and getting the 10 different endings. There's plenty of everything to go around here: comedic relief bits, fanservice, and heart-wrenching despair as you watch the Overlord, that you trained and who fell in love with you, get eaten like yesterday's leftover potato casserole. If you have the fortitude and willpower for grinding, there's a nice bit to be appreciated by 100%-ing this. That being said, if you just picked this up for cheap on a Steam sale, I'd say just play two or three runs, making your final run the True Ending run for good measure so you get the closure you, and anyone else playing this, would deserve.

An interesting fact about this game is that while it was developed by Compile Heart, quite a few Disgaea staffers were on board with the project, such as the director of Disgaea 4, Masahiro Yamamoto, and the composer for Phantom Brave and Disgaea: Hour of Darkness, Tenpei Sato. Sato's signature style is very present here, as just like in Disgaea, you'll find yourself humming the tracks that play in the menus, when fighting Trillion, etc. even long after you've been done playing the game.

I very rarely 100% games. I've only ever 100%'d three games in my life, but this one was worth it to me. Getting to see each Overlord's ending, and watch them die again and again and again and again all for the climax in the true final chapter was all-too satisfying.

(I hope you'll allow it, but I simply copy-pasted the review I had already written for this game on Steam)

It's essentially more of the first game, didn't even bother to finish this one though.

A pretty fun, fan-service-heavy third-person shooter. It really shows in its game design that it was made for a handheld though, with missions being pretty short, gameplay lacking any real depth, and areas being recycled. The music is pretty generic as well, but the weapon selection is pretty decent. Best part about this is you really don't need to know Japanese to play the game, you can just fumble your way through most menus and missions pretty easily. Worst comes to worst, just bust out the Google Translate app on your phone and take a photo of your screen for it to translate a few words.

This game is nice in short stints though; just pick the girl you think is the cutest and get to shooting.

A pretty gimmicky game that is the weakest entry in the Senran Kagura franchise. Still, there's a little enjoyment to be had if you're a hardcore fan of the series; lots of fan service to be had.

Also loses half a star because there's no Yozakura

This feels so close to being a pretty great pinball game. It is really lacking more characters and especially pinball tables. There are only three, with each one having a few minor variations/flavors included as a separate table so they can say there's more tables than there actually are. If they had added some DLC characters, and especially a couple more unique tables, this would've been a much better experience.

Loses a half-star because no Yozakura.

A pretty standard rhythm game with Senran Kagura flavoring, though it has some odd difficulty spikes. It's not a bad game by any means, but it's not great. I'd only recommend this for the hardcore fans.

Yozakura is still the best!

Not bad, but the frame rate is pretty rough and the gameplay is at its simplest and leaves you wanting. If this had been my first exposure to the Senran Kagura series I’d probably be more forgiving of it, but I’m spoiled by the Versus games and how much smoother they are.

Since there's no Yozakura in this game, Mirai's the best here.

A pretty decent RPG with some neat ideas, but it's really restrictive in regards to when you can recruite certain members, and I missed two characters (thus not getting the good ending) because of how incredibly small the window for recruiting one of those two characters was. I hear Suikoden II is considerably better though, so I'll probably check that out sometime.

This is it, the absolute best Build Engine game. I'm sorry Blood, you're amazing, truly, but this one just barely edges out for me. If anything, that should be a testament to how well Blood holds up after all these years.

Great Value(TM) Brand Laharl is absolutely fucking insufferable. I've tried playing this game three different times over the span of about 4 years and I just fucking can't stand him. I couldn't stand to play beyond Chapter 4. I don't like Almaz either; he's a whiny knock-off Adell. The only reason this game is getting this high of a score is due to the gameplay itself being well and good.

I cried & legitimately questioned the meaning of my existence. Fantastic game.

This is it, the best Guitar Hero game in the entire series. As great as 3 was, this one just outshines it in every way. The overall tracklist is the best in the series, same goes for the story mode (the 2112 section of the game was P E A K ). I also liked the new characters, and how the characters would transform later on as well. They even brought back Dragonforce with 'Fury of the Storm.' What more can you ask for?

It doesn't get much better than this. What a great way for the series to end. (Reboot? What Reboot?)