Now, Chrono Cross is a game that needs no introduction, seeing that it is an iconic PS1 title with a lot of people praising it to be as good if not equal as its predecessor, Chrono Trigger.Ĭonsidering I played in the Classic Look mode than the New one, the nostalgia is really heavy, like I’ve returned to being a 10-year-old that had just lent his game out and got this in exchange from a good friend in Elementary. Radical Dreamers: The Jewel That Cannot Be Stolen/Nusumenai Houseki (if you wanna stick to the original JP Subtitle) has multiple endings that are either serious or hilarious on some routes that are unlocked upon completion of the main game, be it the one where you save Kid from a sentient plant that’s trying to eat her whole or where it turns to a madcap adventure about aliens. ![]() This game differs from its prequel by one glaring thing: It plays out like a visual novel but works with minute invisible details such as a timer and several counters like Kid’s affection, your HP (of all things, really!), and some others, all the while playing through a side story that would, later on, be given full life via the latter game’s release which we will expand on later. It plays out only to resolve a loose end of one plot in that game, but you control Serge, a traveling performer accompanied by Kid and a masked mage named Magil out to steal the Frozen Flame, a jewel of immeasurable worth and power that is being guarded by a man-panther named Lynx. Okay, we’re kicking this off with Radical Dreamers, the game that came in earlier and on the Satellaview, only for the Japanese Super Famicom way back in ’96.īe warned, it’ll be a weird trip as the gameplay of the prequel (Chrono Trigger) is absent here. ![]() ![]() Originally released as separate games, Radical Dreamers was released in the Japan-exclusive Satellaview, the Super Famicom’s satellite peripheral while Chrono Cross as we all know was released on the PlayStation 1 on November 18, 1999, in Japan and on August 15, 2000, in North America.
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