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9.0

GamingUnion.net: Lufia: Curse of the Sinistrals Review

The Lufia series has had quite a rocky past to say the least. After the release of the second game in the series, Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals back in 1995 on the Super NES, it wasn't until 2001, after several delays and cancelled games that fans got another game, Lufia: The Legend Returns, but this time it was for a lesser system, the Game Boy Color.

But then comes along a brand-new entry in the franchise, and a reimaging of Lufia: Rise of the Sinistrals to boot, Lufia: Curse of the Sinistrals. After such a long break since a new Lufia title, does Lufia: Curse of the Sinistrals meet player's expectations and possibly even surpass them, or is this simply just a cash-in on the fans' nostalgia?

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gamingunion.net
mephman5051d ago

A solid remake, always good.

xtheownerzx5050d ago

this game was great on the snes and its great on the ds i need to get my hands on this!

70°

Top 10 Best Natsume Games

Alex S. from Link-Cable writes: "Natsume has been around for a long time now. Joining the world of gaming during the hey-day of the NES and Famicom in 1987, the company has gone to produce some of gaming’s most memorable games. From relaxing romps through virtual farms to deep RPG adventures and fast-paced action games, Natsume has done it all! So for today’s Top 10 we decided it would be fun to look back at the company’s legacy of gaming greatness and name the Top 10 Best Natsume games of all time!"

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link-cable.com
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What do you need to know about Lufia?

Sometimes, RPG series people love are lost to the sands of time. The developers that made them go out of business, other companies decide they are not profitable and age leads to them not getting a digital rerelease via a platform like the Virtual Console. Lufia is one of these series. But, while it is difficult to accumulate a complete collection of these games and get into them now, it is not impossible and many installments are worth your time.

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michibiku.com
gangsta_red2447d ago

I remember playing part one and two for SNES.

The SNES was seriously in a class of it's own back then.

nitus102446d ago (Edited 2446d ago )

Could not agree more. Pretty well anyone who wanted to play RPG's on a console had to get a SNES. To be fair the Sega Megadrive/Genesis had a decent collection of RPG's as well so having both consoles gave you the best of all worlds.

Lufia came in two parts.
1) Lufia & The Fortress of Doom
2) Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals

What is interesting is that Lufia II is actually a precursor to Lufia so if you really wanted linearity it would have been better to play Lufia II first.

BTW. There was a game called "Lufia: Curse of the Sinistrals" which was a Nintendo DS remake of "Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals".

gangsta_red2446d ago

I think I remember playing Lufia 2 and realizing it came before part one.

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Lufia 2’s Subtle Storytelling is as Good as it Ever Was

BTM: "Back before I started writing here on Black Trident Media I was doing a serious of write ups called Aspect Analysis on my personal blog, and then later on another site. It may have lost the name here, but all my non-review write ups are done in the same vein as those articles, and I write them with the intent at analyzing a single aspect of a game an discuss why it does or does not work. The first of these, which disappeared from the internet when I let my blog go down was on Lufia 2. That write up was pretty bad due to my lack of experience at the time, but this is me giving it another shot. This is here in part for those of you who may remember reading that and letting you know that yes, that other one was me and this is me giving it another shot, and in part to give everyone a proper Idea of what it is the focus of many of my write ups are."

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blacktridentmedia.com
Keregan3135d ago

Fortress of doom was also an excellent game