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PS2 :: RPG :: Suikoden IV
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Suikoden IV

Suikoden IV
Publisher: Konami
Platform: PS2
Category: RPG
Rating Info 
 		PEGI Rated 7+ 
Release Date: 25/02/2005
Member Rating: 3 Stars
Number of Players: 1
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Member Reviews

Suikoden IV Description

Back in 1996 Konami brought out Genso Suikoden for the PlayStation and immediately secured a loyal following. Loosely based on the Chinese classic novel Water Margins by Shi Nai'an, the game's simple side-scrolling graphics allowed for a large world for its compelling, emotional storyline to develop in. Now nearly a decade later, Konami is bringing the fourth instalment in the series to Europe. The action takes place 100 years before the first Suikoden game, and the environment is - for the first time - maritime, set in the Island Nations. Using the same engine as the Silent Hill series, it's pretty good looking, and the art direction has gone for a more realistic look in contrast to the anime stylings of Suikoden III. Producer Noritada Matsukawa has once again written the story with the help of Junko Kawano, revisiting the Water Margins myth of the 108 Stars, a group of maverick heroes who must come together to defeat the forces of evil. As always in the Suikoden series, players can build their own castle, and now instead of the old pitched battles of earlier games there are tactical engagements with ships on the high seas. An all-new combat system allows the player's characters to battle the large variety of monsters, and their masters, which they encounter as they explore the map's distant shores by sea. Using it, they can pool magic and weapon-based skills to defeat larger foes and perform combination attacks. As well as the group based combat (in which up to four heroes can be teamed) there are also duels, and characters can equip themselves with Runes of Power that they collect as the game progresses. The first Suikoden game on PS2 to receive a European release, the interesting political storyline of Suikoden IV should please European console RPG fans.

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Reviewed by: MikaleeDate: 14/04/2006Rating: 3 Stars
This is a pretty average RPG, which is quite a shame for a series like this. The random battles make it very tedious to play, as they are so frequent, it's almost hard to believe. A game for someone witha LOT of patience!!
Reviewed by: splinterDate: 27/06/2006Rating: 3 Stars
The latest episode in the cult Suikoden series.... what a dissapointment. It is, as Mikalee said, an extremely average RPG; RPG by the numbers, if you like. Its bland graphics are saved only by the hallmark character artwork, which is lovely as ever, its forgettable music is exactly that, and its gameplay and story are pretty much things you've seen before, only not done as well here, for some reason. The main problem that the game has is the size of its world. From just a few hours into the game, you have a ship that can sail anywhere in the archipelago's that consist of the game's world... but theres only half a dozen of them, and sailing between each one is a mammoth task that seems to take forever, and is disrupted by random battles every few seconds, with enemies that don't level up as you do- so the battles quickly become easy and tedious. This could have been less of an issue were there some compelling reason to play the game- but the weak story doesn't really do a good job of holding things together. Of the 108 characters in the game that can join you, only one or two ever get to develop a great deal of personality, and the Hero character is lifeless and uninteresting; his journey is one that seems entirely spurred by other people, and he seems to have no desires or ambitions of his own. So, on the whole, Suikoden IV comes out as a barely average RPG, that doesn't do anything to keep you interested in its actually rather brief story. You'll complete your first game in 28 hours or so, maybe 30 if you're trying for every addiitonal character in the game, but thats hardly lengthy by RPG standards. If you like your RPGs, or have played previous Suikoden games, this might be worth a rent... but don't expect too much here.

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