Does the world still care about Japanese role-playing games? Do people still want to buy them? Do they still deserve our attention?
Ask your average gamerâor your average game developerâand theyâll tell you that the JRPG is a dying genre. Theyâll tell you that Japanese RPGs havenât evolved, or that nobody buys them anymore. That JRPGs are too niche to bring to America. That the style isnât worth anyoneâs time.
https://lastchance.cc/bioware-on-the-decline-of-the-jrpg-5430803%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
For a long time now, Iâve been arguing that JRPGs are under-appreciatedâthat the genre is far more diverse and interesting than people believe. Iâve also argued that the fanbase for JRPGs is larger than most people think it is.
https://lastchance.cc/no-jrpgs-are-not-stale-old-fashioned-archaic-obsole-5899489%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
âI think the market for quality JRPGs outside of Japan is grossly underestimated,â Boyd told me in an e-mail yesterday.
His proof? Boydâs 2011 game Cthulhu Saves The World sold 300,000 copies on PC aloneâand another 100,000 on mobile platforms and the Xbox indie marketplace. Cthulhu Saves The World is a traditional turn-based RPG that in many ways emulates classics like Dragon Quest and Final Fantasy. Itâs also funny, charming, and interesting in its own way. And itâs a big success.
Granted, Cthulhu is a cheap game, and Steam has promoted it a few times with bundles and sales. But those are massive numbers even for a $3 game, and Boyd believes his JRPG isnât an anomaly.
âZeboyd Games is a two-man studio and we made Cthulhu Saves the World in under a year (and not even working full-time on it),â Boyd said. âNot only that, but at the time, we had very little previous development experience. If we were able to find that kind of success with our low-budget JRPG-style RPG, I donât see why a bigger studio with a solid understanding of the genre couldnât find even more success with bigger-budget higher priced games.â
There are some other Westerners making JRPGsâAdam Ripponâs Dragon Fantasy has been a success on iOS and will soon be on PS3 and Vita, and a number of developers have started Kickstarters for JRPG-style games like Echoes of Eternia. But Boyd thinks the market is still untapped.
You donât have to be an indie to get an audienceâdespite common consensus, big-budget console JRPGs have also found a fair amount of success over the past two years. Nintendo of America president Reggie Fils-Aime told me he was quite pleased with Xenobladeâs sales when we chatted last year, and Xseed has said that The Last Story is their most successful launch to date
Most recently, the stellar Ni no Kuni tore up the charts in early 2013âaccording to one person in a position to know (who spoke to me under condition of anonymity), Namco Bandai was very pleased with the RPGâs sales in the United States. Although the publisher has yet to say anything about the gameâs reception, Ni no Kuni was the number-one seller in the UK in January as well.
People want to play good JRPGs. Just look at the charts for Februaryâs PSN sales, via Sony:
Yeah, that data happens to coincide with Square Enix running a sale on Final Fantasy games for half of February, but itâs not a coincidence. People arenât just buying up old Final Fantasy games because theyâre cheap. People are buying them because they want to play great JRPGs.
https://lastchance.cc/a-whole-bunch-of-great-final-fantasy-games-are-50-off-5981806%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
So let this be a message. To a few different groups of people.
To Japanese publishers: Bring your games to the west! If theyâre good, people will buy them. Word will spread. Weâll help.
To game developers: Make JRPGs! Theyâre not obsolete. People want to play them. Not every role-playing game has to feel like Skyrim or Mass Effect. There are a lot of different styles to play around with.
Most importantlyâŠ
To gamers: Speak up! Let your voice be heard. Support great JRPGs. Spend your time telling companies like Square Enix that you want to see games like Bravely Default come to the West, and tell indie developers that youâd love to see them make more JRPGs.
https://lastchance.cc/if-you-like-jrpgs-its-time-to-start-speaking-up-5986277%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Random Encounters is a weekly column dedicated to all things JRPG. It runs every Friday at 3pm ET.