Elizabeth of Vivid Gamer writes: "Recently, NIS America’s Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories made its way onto the PlayStation Store for PS3 owners to enjoy. Because there have been many entries (spin-offs and ports included) since the 2006 release of Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories, one might wonder if there is much reason to go back to an older title when it’s just as easy to play the latest entry, Disgaea 4: A Promise Unforgotten. Consider this a review for those who missed out on the strategy RPG back when it first came out as well as one for those who wonder how the transition to being on the PS3 turned out."
Since 2003, NIS has been giving people a way to help groups of antiheroes accomplish goals of varying degrees of morality. With new versions and iterations arriving every few years, someone might wonder how they could hop into these strategic scenarios. Well, if people check out this guide, they might find a way to make the Netherworld your new second home.
Go Critic: When you think of games that are synonymous with the strategy RPG, there are a few titles that might come to mind depending on when you got into the genre. Shining Force is often credited with bringing the genre to North America, with interest that surged with the release of Final Fantasy Tactics. But it wasn’t until the original Disgaea: Hour of Darkness before the floodgates truly opened and it was no longer unusual to see things like Fire Emblem or Phantom Brave on store shelves.
PixlBit | "Friends, let me talk to you for a bit about addiction of a gaming nature. I’m sure you’ve experienced it before: that sense of falling into a game so completely that it takes over your brain and keeps you up until the wee hours of the morning. I’m here to talk about a recent addiction of mine, a game so devilishly devious in its seduction that you would be wise to stay away, even as I tell you that you should by all means play it. That game would be Disgaea 2, a PlayStation 2 game recently added to the PSN marketplace as a PS2 classic."
I never liked the story, but the Laharl stuff was priceless.