I love eighteenth century composer Frederic Chopin. I love video games. I really love video games featuring Frederic Chopin. With the release of Fred3ric, available now on the Nintendo Switch eShop, Forever Entertainment cements its position as the worldâs most prolific producer of Chopin video games. Theyâve made three of them, beating out both Bandai Namco (Eternal Sonata) and Bloober Team (Music Master: Chopin).
To get you up to speed, Chopin clawed his way out of his gravein the 2012 rhythm game Frederic: The Resurrection of Music. Then he battled more catchy modern arrangements of his renowned compositions in 2014âs Frederic: Evil Strikes Back. In this new sequel, he faces his greatest threat, cybernetically-enhanced versions of historyâs greatest composers.

Fred3ric once again pits time-displaced-composer-punk Chopin against the evil cybernetic god Zeitgeist. Even though its previous plans to ruin Chopin by pitting him against other musicians in rhythm game duels failed twice, Zeitgeist does it a third time, because itâs a machine and not a very original thinker.

What is different are Chopinâs opponents. Instead of battling modern musical genres personified by parodies of pop stars, he squares off against the likes of Mozart, Beethoven, and Bach. Zeitgeist pulls the great composers through time, augments them cybernetically, and sets them loose on poor Freddie Chops.
Bach becomes Hyper J.S.Bach, ultra keyboard player. Beethovenâs well-documented hearing loss is not a problem for Ludvig Van Cyborg, hyper uber-Beethoven with cyber-hearing.

Previous entries in the Frederic series made players tap along to poppy mixes of Chopin music. Fred3ric twists the music of Chopinâs opponents into lovely medleys. Beethovenâs stage, for instance, features a wonderful combination of his fifth symphony with âOde to Joy.â In Norweigian composer Edvard Griegâs stage is a gorgeous mix of several songs I know but donât know the name to because itâs Edvard Grieg. Itâs good stuff.
Fred3ricâs rhythm game battles are standard stuff. Notes drop, press the right buttons in the right order to keep your score above your opponentâs. Players can use buttons to represent the notes on Chopinâs keyboards, but the game was built for touch controls. Setting the Switch down and playing it with your fingertips tapping the screen feels much more natural. Unfortunately I cannot record footage from the Switch when not docked, so imagine the screen below is me playing.

Fred3ric is short and sweet. There are only eight stages to master, and mastery comes pretty quickly for players with even a rudimentary knowledge of classical music. Thereâs no learning curve for learning new songs, as in other rhythm games. These are familiar tunes performed by familiar faces with oddball cybernetic enhancements.
With its cartoon animated cutscenes, goofy sense of humor, and absurd treatment of historyâs greatest musical artists, Fred3ric continues to tell the weird joke Forever Entertainment started telling back in 2012 with The Resurrection of Music. Iâm still riveted.
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