
The other big point worth praising is the branching story that does take some curious twists. With dozens of characters of varying races, backgrounds and allegiances, each woven into the main story arc, you really do get a great sense of the all-enveloping nature of war. Suffice to say, you lead a band of liberators, all with character flaws and personal motivations as clean cut as revenge and as sinister as personal gain. We can mostly sidestep the story, since Tactics Ogre's most important element is the quality of its narrative and the twists that unfold at the end of each chapter.

It's a different kind of beast ancient and traditional and tragically lacking in sales bullet points, save for a wonderful pedigree and gameplay that really needs to be played with your full attention to be appreciated. This is not a game for the twitch-shooter generation. Strong+storytelling+is+something+a+lot+of+games+overlook+these+days. Do you like prosaic, often meandering dialogue that really focuses on storytelling? Do you enjoy deep, methodical strategy with a lot of micro-management? Are you prepared to invest the time pre-battle in reading the voluminous backstory and supporting documents for the full experience? To be certain, this kind of game takes an acquired taste to appreciate - and feel free to use this handy list to qualify your interest. The translation has also been completely rewritten to sit more closely alongside the Japanese text.

While not a remake, the game is a revamped version of the 1995 SNES title that also appeared on PSone and Sega Saturn.

Divided by warring factions and, more tragically, a serious class struggle, a brilliant and often shocking background is painted for one of the best isometric strategy RPGs of all time.Ĭritically and publicly acclaimed in Japan but never afforded a European release, scant few Western gamers have had the chance to delve into the Ogre Battle series - save for a scattershot of entries on PSone, N64 and Game Boy Advance (the most recent of which is also the closest in style and storytelling).

Indeed, as the story unfolds, you are thrown into the thick of dark times for the land of Valeria. With a subtitle like 'Let Us Cling Together', Tactics Ogre immediately renders a tragic scenario of 'Les Miserables' proportions.
