When one great RPG was released only in Japan, people were annoyed. When two great RPGs were released only in Japan, they became legitimately upset. But when three great RPGs were denied to them, they got organized. This was the birth of Operation Rainfall, a publicāand as it turns out completely successfulāpetition to get these three Wii-only RPGs localized in the West.
So great, right? Gamers win a victory and three amazing RPGsāXenoblade Chronicles, The Last Story, and Pandoraās Towerāall come west. High-fives for everyone! ā¦Thereās just one small problem: one of these games is neither an RPG nor is it an āamazingā game.
Yet lack of originality is just one of the flaws in Pandoraās Tower. The motion controls are problematic since both the platforming and combat are built around the orichalcum chain (which is aimed via the Wii-mote). Moreover, like many hack-and-slash games, it suffers from
a fixed camera that seems to specialize in hiding ranged enemies just off screen and making some of the easiest looking jumps next to impossible.
But even these flaws do not make it a terrible game. What it does right, it does right. The storyāespecially the toneāis equal parts creepy, romantic, and adventurous. The many ways you can use the chain in and out of battle, as well as the actual level designs, are quite inventive.
So in the end, the good and bad all balance out to make Pandoraās Tower an average adventure game; worth buying for fans of the genre, but nothing groundbreaking.
The same cannot be said for its Operation Rainfall companions. Xenoblade and The Last Story are the most innovative, exciting JRPGs to be released this console generation. Pandoraās Tower is far more lucky than deserving to be continually mentioned alongside the other two. But black sheep or not, who knows if Operation Rainfall would have ever gotten off the ground without it. After all, no one can doubt that itās better to get two great games and one mediocre game than none at all.
Pandoraās Tower is scheduled for release in Europe on April 13, 2012.