20°
8.5

RPGfan : Legacy of Ys: Books I & II Review

Damian Thomas writes "As a big Ys fan, I was delighted to find out that the US would be getting both Legacy of Ys games on one cartridge. Having one is great, but having both together sounded like a real value. I was worried, however, that Ys would have some trouble jumping from more traditional platforms/PC to the handheld, two-screened Nintendo DS. Would the music quality remain the same? How would the graphics fare? And would the stylus be used in some sort of gimmicky fashion, or would it be implemented well? Read on to find out."

20°
6.5

DG: Legacy of Ys: Books I & II Review

DG writes: "When Ys Book I & II was first released on the TurboGrafx-CD it was considered the first must-own game for NEC's fledgling console. Although it was largely ignored by the U.S. consumer, game critics of the time hailed it as one of the greatest role-playing games ever made. The game's revolutionary cinemas, amazing music and real voice acting (albeit ridiculously awful voice acting) set this game apart from the rest of the crowd, and may have been the reason why a very young Electronic Gaming Monthly handed out their first perfect 10 score to this adventure game."

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defunctgames.com
10°
7.5

GamingNexus Review: Legacy of Ys: Book I & II

When Ys Book I & II was first released on the TurboGrafx-CD it was considered the first must-own game for NEC's fledgling console. Although it was largely ignored by the U.S. consumer, game critics of the time hailed it as one of the greatest role-playing games ever made. The game's revolutionary cinemas, amazing music and real voice acting (albeit ridiculously awful voice acting) set this game apart from the rest of the crowd, and may have been the reason why a very young Electronic Gaming Monthly handed out their first perfect 10 score to this adventure game.

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gamingnexus.com
20°
8.0

Stage Select: Legacy of Ys Books I & II Review

Stage Select:
The Legacy of Y's Books I and II is a reimagining of the classic, most closely aligning itself with the Turbo CD version of the game. While it compares favorably to that version, it also adds a few features that make sense given the passing of time. The addition of 3D graphics seems almost mandatory, and adding something simple like "press a button to swing your weapon" doesn't seem too out of place.

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stageselect.com