If they were trying to make a game that felt like it was DOS based, they succeeded.

User Rating: 4.5 | Hana to Taiyou to Ame to - Owaranai Rakuen- DS
I remember reading an ad for this game in a magazine a while back. It interested me a little but not enough for me to actively look into it. Or remember it existed until I saw it today and picked it up. All I can say is I'm not amused. The game itself actually looks worse than the pictures published in the magazine. Some people will try to pass it off as a trademark of SUDA51. But it's one of two parts where FSR reaches back to the DOS era of gaming. But to stick solely with the graphics for now; I quite like the portrait art, it's simple and a little different without being way out there. But the character models... zodd help me the main characters ears make him look like a Vulcan, or an elf, whichever floats your proverbial boat.
Now the second thing I mentioned. Not since I was playing games in Windows 3.0, on DOS, have I been outright forced to read through the manual to find some information so that I could actually play the game. (Yes, I'm referring to Stunts, and who actually paid for that?) Either this is an anti-pirate tool, and a bad one at that. Or just a way to make people flip through the manual. Which I for one never do because quite honestly, and literally, they stink. In a offends my sense of smell sense of the term. Hopefully that's clarification enough. If they honestly think that's going to stop people from downloading the game they really should get on the internet a little more often.
Then we get into a few of the smaller annoyances of the game. Such as how every time, and I mean every time you start a mission your main character goes spews forth a bunch of random gibberish that is supposed to be helpful, or something. But in reality is just an annoyance made more annoying by the games 'talking' sound effect. Now I will give the game some props, kudos or what-have-you for having some nice puzzles. And by nice I mean annoyingly simple, and therefore almost impossible. Which makes everything but the 'forced to read the manual' thing forgivable.