按此可將縮圖變更大的圖像於 Disgaea: Hour of Darkness 3 (PlayStation3 the Best)
詳細描述
Disgaea: Hour of Darkness 3 (aka. Makai Senki Disgaea 3) takes place in a Netherworld School called the Maritsu Evil Academy. In this demon school, a good student is one who engages in delinquent activities such as ditching classes, or not doing homework. The student who participates the most in these kind of activities is known as the Honor Student, while demons who arrive to class early and do their homework are known as delinquents. Mao, son of the chairman, has not once attended class since the beginning of school and is known as the honor-student of Maritsu Evil Academy. His ambition for the future is to overthrow his father, who also happens to be an Overlord, and take his title for himself. After reading a few volumes in his manga, Mao comes to the conclusion that "heroes are the ones who defeat devils". From that point on, Mao resolved to become a hero himself, convinced it will help him achieve his goal.
Eventually, Raspberyl, the delinquent of the school, learns about Mao's goal and begins to worry. If Mao were to achieve the title of Hero, then it would endanger her position as the school's "Number One Delinquent". She makes up her mind to follow Mao, stop his plan, and once again secure her title. However since Raspberyl is a demon delinquent, she tries to solve the problem without violence and talk him out of it instead. Seeing this from a distance, Almaz, a hero himself, misunderstands the situation and tries to save the day. Mao accepts the challenge and defeats him, stealing Almaz's title in the process. With the title of Hero, Mao believes he is one step closer to defeating his father and achieving his goal of becoming an Overlord.
Nippon Ichi rules, off course with help to Atlus' publish another great game with excelent price and disponibility, this is the oportunity to get the best grid-turn-based game in this console, there are not game equal and our lenguage for long time. run in 1080p beat enemies with bestial combos and you no doubt to get one.
Nice game There is nothing to say, another hilarious srpg from the Disgaea saga, with more of the same and some new mechanics, Disgaea 3: Absense of Justice gives the player a fun and challenging time.
More of the same... and we love it. Whenever you see a Nippon Ichi game, the first two words that probably pop in your head (assuming you're familiar with their games, naturally) are "ludicrous levels of damage" and "humor". With Disgaea 3 it's no different. Disgaea 2 had been sadly lacking in the last department - at best it made me chuckle a couple of times. But it just didn't have the flair that made Disgaea fun and famous in the first place.
In Disgaea 3 they've made amends for that little mistake. The game breaks the fourth wall fairly often, with jokes such as "demons are lazy so instead of levelling up skills everything is bought with mana now" (referring to the changes of the Weapon Mastery system). Speaking of changes, the Weapon Mastery system is gone; to acquire new skills, now you must create new, higher-tier characters so they can learn other abilities. The Dark Assembly remains, though now it's called Homeroom (the entire game is high-school flavored), but the basic principles of it remain the same - bribe your way through, toss demons around or beat the everliving snot out of them to get things done. Changes to individual characters such as increasing movement range or throwing ability are no longer resolved via Dark Assembly; rather, you must enter that character's Class World and pay for the upgrades with mana - which you can acquire during the journey itself.
Gathering specialists for your items has also become somewhat easier due to the new club system. For those of you familiar with Soul Nomad, you can now assemble a classroom, assigning seats and clubs to each character - doing so enables several benefits, including but not limited to allowing a character to gain a portion of experience or mana from another character.
The graphics remain as beautiful as ever, and the attacks remain as ludicrously overpowered as ever. The game is all-around fun, despite the initial learning curve.
There is no multiplayer, which might disappoint some, but then again no SRPG has ever been built so it could be played that way.
For all of you familiar with Nippon Ichi work, it's more of the same, and the same is awesome. (Yes, there are endgame cameos, though some of them are DLCs).
For Disgaea Fans All of Disgaea games are good or great. This game also a good game to play. the weak points in graphic, it's not like for PS3 or HD graphic, it's just like PS2 graphic.