If ever there was a game that captured the magnificence of the indie spirit, it's "Fall of Angels." It's not flawless, but JRPG fans will be surprised at how much they end up loving this one.
One of these days Kemco’s going to deliver a slam dunk in iOS’ retro JRPG library, I just know it. “Eve of the Genesis” leaves me still waiting for that day...
In so many ways, “Chrono Trigger” serves as a wake-up call and a benchmark for the quality iOS RPG developers need to strive for from now on. Sadly it falls flat on its face in the interface department, which will leave frustrated new players wondering what all the fuss was about in the first place.
Yeah, it's awesome. If you're a TBS fan you'll have a nice banquet to feast on here, and if you're interested in story at all and don't mind tactical gameplay with plenty of depth, "Ravenmark" will be of interest to you as well.
"Alphadia" is the second in Kemco's one-two JRPG punch. Playing this one right after "Symphony of Eternity" was quite interesting; it makes one feel as if a perfect JRPG had been split down the center, with the interesting story, attractive presentation, and overall polish going to "Alphadia," while "Symphony" came away with the deeper gameplay.
In many ways, "Symphony of Eternity" plays like everything you could ever hope for in a JRPG: it serves up a truly great character class system, a competently delivered - if average - plot, and a battle system that encourages a strategic approach over level grinding. If only its environments weren't so tiny and restrictive!
Something wicked this way comes! Wait...is that a squid wearing a jack o' lantern on its head!? You'll find that and more in The Game Bakers' first content update to "Squids!" And if you or a friend haven't picked up this slick tactical Action RPG yet, look inside for your chance to get it free, courtesy of The Game Bakers!
Fans of RPGs, Action RPGs, and Real Time Strategy games are guaranteed tons of fun with "Powder Monkeys" -- as long as they appreciate the supreme challenge of managing naval warfare on a very tight in-game budget, that is.
"Galaxy Pirate Adventure" serves up tons of gameplay hours, an interesting real time combat system, and lots of micromanagement, which all translate into plenty of bang for the player's buck. A weak story translation and lack of clear explanations for various minutiae do cut into its accessibility at release, however, leaving it in need of more polish to go along with all the flashy lasers and glossy spaceships.