Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories Review

Just like the first Disgaea, this strategy role-playing game is best suited for fans of other stuff like it, and it's chock-full of depth, lasting value, and surprisingly good humor.

The Good

  • Deep, rewarding turn-based strategy gameplay can last you dozens of hours  
  • Lighthearted story does a great job of not taking itself seriously  
  • Attractive presentation, featuring nicely drawn artwork and some great voice acting.

The Bad

  • Recycles a lot of graphics and most everything else from the first Disgaea  
  • Complicated gameplay may overwhelm less-than-hardcore strategy RPG players.

Has it really been three years since the first Disgaea? Though Nippon Ichi Software's memorable cult classic was unmistakably similar to other strategy role-playing games like 1998's popular Final Fantasy Tactics, it had its own weird, goofy style and many nuanced gameplay twists that made it unique. Now Disgaea is back in a sequel that really doesn't mess with a successful formula. It's got a great new story and a ton more missions and content, but it's fundamentally very similar to its predecessor. While too much familiarity might be a bad thing for sequels to games with a lot of room for improvement, somehow it's just as satisfying and rewarding to play through Disgaea 2 now as it was to play the previous game years ago, provided you're not looking for a completely new experience. There's just so much charm and wit to the presentation, and so many interesting ways to play through the game's turn-based battles.

Like the original, Disgaea 2's anime-inspired, lighthearted characters and storyline are playfully self-referential. The game turns out to be connected to the original, so fans may look forward to seeing some of their favorite characters back in the sequel. However, this is a self-contained story that doesn't require previous knowledge of Disgaea. The main character is a confident young man named Adell, who seems to be the only human remaining in a town that's become infested with monsters. Apparently it's all the doing of one Overlord Zenon, who's cursed the people to lose their consciences as well as their memories (hence the game's subtitle). So Adell intends to find Zenon and beat him down. At the beginning of the game, Adell's mom attempts to facilitate this by performing a summoning ritual intended to make Zenon appear right then and there. Things don't go quite as planned, though, and out pops an attractive, haughty young lady claiming to be the Overlord's only daughter. Now Adell and the gun-toting Princess Rozalin must venture forth together in search of the Overlord, each for their own reasons.

Disgaea 2's story strikes a fine balance between coherence and pure silliness. There are fully voiced story sequences both before and after most of the game's dozens of missions, divided into more than a dozen episodes. Along the way, Adell and Rozy will reluctantly (and predictably) grow to like one another--and they'll meet up with a strange yet likable supporting cast, including a French-accented, slightly lascivious flying frog, a washed-up intergalactic celebrity looking to regain his former stardom, a polite ninja girl looking for excuses to honorably end her own life, and more. The story plays for laughs almost constantly, and it frequently succeeds. The game's colorful anime art style and many suggestive jokes won't be to everybody's liking, but there can be no denying that Disgaea 2's story is filled with humor and delivered with much enthusiasm. It's very similar in tone to the story from the original Disgaea, but for better or worse, the hero isn't a mean-spirited, spoiled little brat in this case.

From a gameplay standpoint, Disgaea 2 plays just like the original. It would be difficult to pick the gameplay tweaks out of a lineup, but they're there to help give you more stuff to play around with (like cell phones for mid-battle pizza deliveries...seriously) and the game plays a little faster than before. Once again, you'll get to run around in a little hub area before each mission, buying new gear for your characters and chatting with various sometimes-helpful creatures, but the brunt of the game consists of a linear sequence of turn-based strategy missions. A typical mission requires you to defeat all opposing characters on the map by deploying up to 10 characters of your own. The familiar-looking isometric perspective and basic properties of other strategy RPGs all apply. For instance, enemies are more vulnerable if attacked from behind, and a balanced party of close-combat specialists, ranged attackers, and magic users tends to be the safest bet for any new encounter. Your characters all level up as they fight, becoming stronger while gaining new skills and abilities. Many different character classes will become available as you play, so eventually you can marshal squads containing warriors, geomancers, samurai, gun-toting cowboys, demonic penguins, thieves, and more. Building the perfect squad is a never-ending and interesting challenge.

Pizza deliveries and demon penguins notwithstanding, such gameplay elements are conventional to most strategy RPGs. Where Disgaea 2 breaks the mold, like its predecessor, is through the use of a number of absurd but intriguing twists that force you to adopt some decidedly unconventional tactics. For instance, it's possible for characters to use their turns lifting each other up on their shoulders; you can form a tall column of characters, who each can then throw one another across the map as part of the same turn (or you can make them attack from this position). There's also the game's "geopanel" system, which makes it so that certain colored spots on a map may confer a variety of special effects on whoever's standing there--or, in some cases, prevent passage altogether. If you can get to a colored panel's power source, you can transfer these effects or destroy them altogether. Be careful, though, as the power sources can now sometimes get up and walk around on their own. Their effects range wildly, from being very beneficial (invincibility!) to being very dangerous (enemies gain a bunch of levels each turn). Ultimately they help introduce a lot of variety while adding multiple layers of complexity to some of the later missions in the game.

prev

Check Prices: $29.99 – 39.95

advertisement

Player Reviews

Critic Scores

*The links above will take you to other Web sites and are provided for your reference. GameSpot does not produce or endorse the content on these sites.

advertisement
Click Here

Game Stats

Games you may like…

Users who looked at content for this game also looked at these games.

See More Similar Games