Arc the Lad

This article is about the video game series. For the first game in the series, see Arc the Lad (video game).
Arc the Lad

Logo from the Arc the Lad video games
Genres Role-playing video game
Developers Sony Computer Entertainment, G-Craft, Cattle Call
Publishers Sony Computer Entertainment, Working Designs

Arc the Lad (アークザラッド Ākuzaraddo) is a series of role-playing video games that were released for the PlayStation and PlayStation 2. Several of the games were published by Sony Computer Entertainment (SCEI) in Japan. The games were never released outside Japan until Arc the Lad Collection was released by Working Designs in 2002. An anime television series based on Arc the Lad II was also made. The game series started with tactical RPGs but branched out to other genres with Arc the Lad: End of Darkness, which still features RPG elements. Each of the games also feature recurring characters, such as the main character, Arc, who appears in several of the games.

Games

Arc the Lad was developed by G-Craft and published by SCEI in Japan on June 30, 1995. The game features tactical role-playing game battle elements, which would become a staple for the series.[1] Arc the Lad introduces several characters that appear in all three games in the collection. Arc, the lead, is a boy from the small town of Touvil who is fated to fight corruption. Characters like Kukuru, Iga, Poco, Tosh, and Chongara also make future appearances.

Arc the Lad II, developed by ARC Entertainment and published by SCEI, was released in Japan on November 1, 1996, and was re-released twice. This game continues to use the tactics style battles, featuring much more complex statistics than its predecessor, a more interactive world map and a longer game length.[1] A new feature are the guilds, which allow the player to take jobs as side quests. The characters of Arc the Lad reappear alongside new ones. Elc, a young hunter, joins the fight against the corrupt government. He and his fellow hunter Shu meet up with several other characters involved in the mess, including Arc and his friends, and bring Andel and his followers down.

Arc the Lad: Monster Game with Casino Game, developed by ARC Entertainment and published by SCEI, was released in Japan on July 31, 1997, and was re-released twice,[2] first as part of Arc the Lad Collection (where it was known as Arc Arena: Monster Tournament), and again when it was released on the Japanese PlayStation Store as a PSone Classic on December 12, 2007.[3]

Arc the Lad III, the final Arc game for the PlayStation, was released on October 28, 1999. It was the only game in the collection to feature two discs. Similarly to the first two, this Arc game uses tactics battles and basic RPG elements.[1] The explorable maps of Arc II return. However, unlike the first two, the game is strictly job driven; the story only progresses as the player takes and completes jobs from the guilds. This game introduces Alec and Lutz, two small-town boys looking to become great Hunters and who battle a new, corrupt entity known as the Academy. Characters from previous games make cameo appearances and occasionally fight alongside Alec.

For their US release, Working Designs published Arc the Lad I, II, III and Monster Tournament as part of a compilation of Arc games (Arc the Lad Collection) on April 18, 2002 in North America. The collection as a whole received mainly positive reception.[4]

Arc the Lad: Kijin Fukkatsu (Arc the Lad: Resurrection of the Machine God) is a Wonderswan Color game developed by Bandai and released in 2002 in Japan.[5] Set after the main series, this game features similar combat and gameplay to the previous installments. Elc, from Arc the Lad II, returns as the main character as he discovers a girl sent from the past to his time because of a hostile robot takeover. Finia, the girl, Elc, and several of his friends return once again to save humanity.[6]

Arc the Lad: Twilight of the Spirits was the first PlayStation 2 game in the Arc series. It was developed by a group called Cattle Call, and published by SCEI. It was released in Japan on March 20, 2003 and in North America on June 25 of the same year by SCEA. This was also the only Arc game to date to come out in Europe, released by SCEE the following year. The battle system in this installment allows characters to move freely in circular ranges across fields during their turns as opposed to the grid-based fields of its predecessors.

Arc the Lad: End of Darkness is the final Arc game and the second to be released on the PS2. Developed by Cattle Call and published by SCEI, the game was released in Japan on November 3, 2004. Namco then published the game for its North American release.[7] This game does not follow the tactics battle style of the previous games, instead using action RPG combat. Online multiplayer is also included.

Development

When the Arc games were originally released in Japan years before a North American release, SCEA hardly considered bringing them to the U.S., thinking that the role-playing video game market was not an important one.[8] Working Designs, then known in the U.S. for publishing RPGs, actually tried to license Arc the Lad, but Sony of America turned them down. Years later, SCEA came under new management, and with the popularity of other RPGs like Final Fantasy VII, Working Designs was able to publish all three games at once with the Japanese release of Arc the Lad III.[8]

Arc the Lad Collection was released in 2002 and boasted four separate games--Arc the Lad I, II, III and Monster Arena, a side-game that allows players to take captured monsters from Arc the Lad II and use them in combat. The collection also featured a making of CD, DualShock controller thumb pads, a memory card holder, character standees, a hardcover instruction booklet, and a glossy box (omake box) to hold it all.[9]

Reception

Each of the Arc games has received decent reception. Arc the Lad Collection has a 80.77% on GameRankings.com.[4] The compilation is often praised for its ambitious packaging and game content, which could last over 150 hours.[10] When the collection was released, the first two games' graphics seemed a bit outdated,[10] although some critics find the graphics acceptable. Critics mostly agree that the take on tactical battles was refreshing because the battles are generally fast-paced.[10] Although the first game in the series is much shorter than the other two, it is believed to be only a prologue to the second game.[9][10]

Arc the Lad: Twilight of the Spirits also received similar reviews. It has a 75% on GameRankings.com.[11] Arc the Lad: End of Darkness, the second Arc game for the PS2, is generally rated much lower than the other games, receiving a 57% on GameRankings.com.[12]

Anime

Arc the Lad

Promotional image distributed by Bee Train
アークザラッド
(Ākuzaraddo)
Genre Action, Fantasy, Science fiction
Anime television series
Directed by Itsuro Kawasaki
Written by Akemi Omode
Music by Michiru Oshima
Studio Bee Train
Licensed by
Network WOWOW
English network
Original run April 5, 1999 October 11, 1999
Episodes 26
Manga
Arc the Lad 2
Written by Kaoru Fujinaga
Published by Enix
Magazine Monthly Shōnen Gyaguou
Original run June 1997April 1999
Volumes 4
Manga
Arc the Lad 2 Honoo no Eruku
Written by Hideaki Nishikawa
Published by Enix
Magazine Monthly Shōnen Gangan
Original run 19982001
Volumes 10
Light novel
Arc the Lad 2 Honoo no Eruku Sevenfold Stories
Written by Hideaki Nishikawa
Published by Enix
Magazine Monthly Gangan Wing
Published August 2000

The Arc the Lad anime adaptation was produced by Bee Train and directed by Itsuro Kawasaki. The series ran on Japan's WOWOW satellite network for 26 episodes from April 5, 1999, to October 11, 1999[13] as part of the Anime Complex omnibus series. A North American release was produced by ADV Films and aired on the Anime Network.

Plot

The story follows the story of Arc the Lad II, the second game in the video game series. The world is also similar to the game, full of technology, but with magic and beasts as well. An evil corporation secretly controls this world and produces powerful monster (sometimes human) creations called chimera. Elc gets caught up in this mess when he rescues a young female beast tamer from the corporation. Her name is Lieza. Together with Shu and the rest of their companions, they fight to save a corrupt world.

Episode list

  1. The Boy With a Flame
  2. Beginning of the Destiny
  3. Feeling in the Rain
  4. Pale Goddess
  5. The Criminals
  6. Beyond the Sound of Waves
  7. Ancient Guardian
  8. Runaway
  9. Friend Who Was Left Behind
  10. The Crusade With No Name
  11. Lonely Brave Man
  12. White House
  13. Smiling Holy Mother
  14. Shrine Maiden of the Spirit
  15. Blaze has Stood
  16. Reconquer
  17. Scarlet Castle
  18. Chimera Tower
  19. Confrontation of Two Great Men
  20. Meet Again
  21. The Place Where the Truth Is
  22. Hiding in the Shadows
  23. Frozen Eyes
  24. Quickening of the Darkness
  25. Holy Arc
  26. Shining Boy

Music

The opening theme for the anime series was the Arc the Lad Main Theme by Masahiro Andoh. Two ending themes were sung by NiNa: Happy Tomorrow (episodes 01-12, 26) and Rest in Peace (episodes 13-26).

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Thom Moyles (2002). "Arc theLad Collection at GameCritic". Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  2. "Arc Arena for PS". GameSpot. Retrieved 2010-08-24.
  3. "アーク ザ ラッド® モンスターゲーム with カジノゲーム". PlayStation.com(Japan). Sony. 2007-12-12. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
  4. 1 2 "Arc the Lad Collection at GameRankings". 2002. Retrieved March 2014.
  5. "Kijin Fukkatsu at RETROBASE.NET". 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2007.
  6. "Anime Digital News". 2002. Archived from the original on November 17, 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2007.
  7. Christian Nutt (2005). "Arc the Lad EoD preview". Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  8. 1 2 David Smith (2001). "Arc the Lad Collection preview". Retrieved October 10, 2007.
  9. 1 2 Mickey Shannon (2003). "Arc the Lad Collection review". Archived from the original on 13 November 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2007.
  10. 1 2 3 4 "Arc the Lad Collection review". 2003. Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved October 10, 2007.
  11. "Twilight Spirits at GameRankings.com". 2007. Archived from the original on 17 October 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2007.
  12. "End of Darkness at GameRankings.com". 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2007.
  13. それ以外の作品 [Other works] (in Japanese). Bee Train. Retrieved 2011-08-06.

External links

Games

TV series

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