Resonance of Fate

Resonance of Fate

European cover art, showing main protagonists Zephyr (left), Leanne (center) and Vashyron (back).
Developer(s) tri-Ace
Publisher(s) Sega
Director(s) Takayuki Suguro
Producer(s) Mitsuhiro Shimano
Jun Yoshino
Programmer(s) Yuichiro Kitao
Yoshiharu Gotanda
Artist(s) Kentaro Kagami
Masashi Nakagawa
Writer(s) Masaki Norimoto
Yasushi Otake
Composer(s) Motoi Sakuraba
Kōhei Tanaka
Platform(s) PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Release date(s)
  • JP January 28, 2010
  • NA March 16, 2010
  • EU March 26, 2010
  • AUS March 18, 2010
Genre(s) Role-playing video game
Mode(s) Single-player

Resonance of Fate, known in Japan as End of Eternity,[1] is a role-playing video game (RPG) developed by tri-Ace and published by Sega for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. It released in January 2010 in Japan and March 2010 in Western territories. The game, in contrast to other RPGs of the time, uses a fast-paced strategic combat system revolving around different types of firearms and combination moves between the three playable characters.

Resonance of Fate takes place on Earth in the distant future. When humanity is nearly annihilated by the spread of toxic gases, a purification system called Basel was constructed. In time, the surviving human population created a civilization around Basel's central tower, watched over by its mechanical core Zenith. Zenith ties human lives to quartz stones, making them immune to the toxin while giving them predetermined social level and lifespans. The three protagonists—Zephyr, Leanne, and Vashyron—form a mercenary group that take odd jobs for the populace of Basel. During their missions, they discover a plan by the city's ruling Cardinals to subvert Zenith's rule, and discover their own connections to the Cardinals' plans.

The core concepts for Resonance of Fate were an RPG set in a steampunk environment and combat involving guns rather than swords and magic. Developed with a Western audience in mind, it was the first collaboration between tri-Ace and Sega which formed due to the originality of the project and Sega's interest in gaining a high-profile RPG for its catalog. It was designed around tri-Ace's proprietary ASKA Engine, which was shared with titles such as Star Ocean: The Last Hope. Its gameplay was influenced by multiple Western action films including The Matrix. The music was co-composed by Motoi Sakuraba and Kohei Tanaka. Reception of the title has generally been mixed to positive, with its gameplay receiving the majority of praise.

Gameplay

A battle in Resonance of Fate with the Bezel gauges system at the bottom.

The combat of Resonance of Fate employs the "tri-Attack Battle system", which involves a mixture of real-time and turn-based controls. During each character's turn, the player can move around and perform actions, limited by the number of action points. The turn ends when the player attacks or all action points are used up. Initiating an attack employs a charging system; once a target is selected, the attack charges up until the meter is full and the attack is unleashed. Players can also choose to charge up the attack multiple times, for a more powerful attack. The time needed to charge depends on the proximity of the enemy. Closer enemies require less charge time but it renders the player more vulnerable to attack. Enemies also require charge to attack and battle strategy involves interrupting their charges.[2] There are two damage types in the game. The first is "scratch damage", which is only dealt by sub-machine guns. Scratch damage accumulates quickly, but cannot kill anything. Scratch damage must be converted into "direct damage", using pistols and grenades on an enemy with scratch damage to defeat it.[3]

Players are able to move about the battlefield freely, but they have the option to create predefined paths for the character to follow. While moving along these paths, characters gain access to Hero actions, which make them immune to damage and speed up charge times. However, the use of these Hero actions requires the use of Bezels; these items are an essential element in battle and are recharged through a variety of methods, such as destroying portions of an enemy's weapons and armor, or killing an enemy.[4] Characters using Hero actions can attack while jumping in the air, and are also able to unleash special attacks which play out as stylish firearm maneuvers.[2] Enemies are only able to move while the player's current character is moving and will usually attack only that character.[2]

In addition to fueling Hero actions, Bezels act as a safeguard to character defeat. Characters will not receive any direct damage as long as there is at least one full, unused Bezel. If there are enough Bezels remaining, receiving damage that would otherwise defeat the character instead causes the character to be knocked into the air and the Bezel is shattered into shards that scatter across the battlefield. If the player does not have any Bezels remaining, the characters go into critical mode. Critical mode causes the characters to become extremely scared, leaving them unable to shoot quickly, unable to use Hero actions, and taking direct damage from every attack. Four Bezel Shards must be collected by the characters in order to restore a Bezel and replenish their power, and enemies can even pick up Bezel Shards to regenerate health and shields. The game ends if any character is killed and there are no intact Bezels to protect them.[5]

The game automatically starts on "Normal" difficulty and the player may suspend and save the game at any time.[6] Upon completion of the game, the player can start a New Game Plus, with an unlocked "Hard" mode. With each successful completion of a new difficulty level, further difficulty levels will become available in which enemy health and damage is multiplied. When restarting on a harder mode, the player retains access to the post-game bonus dungeon, clothing items, Bestiary List and Game Scores (viewable at the Arena). If a previously completed difficulty is selected, all items and levels will be retained with the exception of colored Energy Hexes. There are ten difficulty settings in Resonance of Fate.

Synopsis

Setting

Resonance of Fate takes place on Earth in the distant future. The levels of pollution in the atmosphere trigger massive environmental changes, making the world hostile to human life. On the brink of extinction, humanity creates Basel, a giant air purification module controlled by the Zenith System. As conditions worsened in the land surrounding Basel, the remnants of humanity gathered around it and built a great city around Zenith's tower. While Basel and the Zenith System control the surrounding environment to make it habitable for humans, it also controls the human population: each person born has their social status determined, and their exact lifespan is controlled through quartz crystals programmed by Zenith. Basel continues for uncounted years into a class-driven society, and in time, the populace forgets everything about Basel's past: those at the top of the tower become the city's leaders, dubbed Cardinals, and indoctrinate the people into a religion deifying the Zenith System.[7][8][9] The three main protagonists are "Hunters", mercenaries taking on odd jobs throughout Basel.[7]

Characters

Plot

The game opens with Vashyron doing battle with a berserk Zephyr. Despite Zephyr being shot twice in the head, he does not die. Vashyron decides to take him in as a partner in his Hunter group. Some time later, Zephyr sees and attempts to save Leanne as she jumps from a bridge, and both miraculously survive their resultant fall. The story skips forward two years—Zephyr and Vashryon are running their group with Leanne, taking on odd jobs across the city. Among their clients are the ruling Cardinals and people from lower strata of the tower. During their missions, they encounter instances of people's fates changing unexpectedly, going against the pre-determined path set by Zenith. They also have run-ins with Rebecca, a superhuman, mentally unstable woman from beyond Basel's borders. It is revealed that Vashryon himself faced Rebecca when she first arrived in Basel. He was fatally wounded, but was saved by Zenith, and its resultant retaliation on Rebecca broke her mind.

As they continue taking missions, the three learn that the city's ruling Cardinals are directly responsible for the crisis. Over twenty years before, the ruling Prelate Frieda envisioned a world where people were free of Zenith's control. While she was popular among the Cardinals, with her closest ally being Cardinal Rowen, her ideals led to her being killed by extremists. Rowen was thrown into despair by her death, and when shown the truth about Zenith by Cardinal Sullivan, he is convinced into working with other Cardinals to fulfill Frieda's vision. Rowen and Sullivan create test subjects programmed to die at specific times: Leanne was #20, designed to die on her 20th birthday. A sympathetic scientist named Juris freed Leanne, and when she learned the truth, she tried to commit suicide before being saved by Zephyr. At the same time, Sullivan studied Rebecca, who had developed natural immunity to the poisons beyond Basel's borders, and sought a way of imprinting her powers onto others. Zephyr was one of his test subjects, along with Zephyr's sister, who was killed by Zephyr during his rampage.

By the time Vashryon and his comrades learn the full tale from Juris, Rowen is in the midst of a crisis of faith due to his control over the Zenith System through his ring. During the party's confrontation with Sullivan where he threatens to have Leanne's quartz destroyed if they attack him, Rowen shoots Sullivan to try and prove the existence of a higher power through Leanne's survival. The three then confront Rowen directly and fatally wound him, but Rowen's control of the Zenith System preserves his life. Vashyron calls Zephyr and Leanne off, seeing further fighting is pointless. During the game's credits, Rowen uses his power to resurrect the Cardinals, then leaves the control ring on Frieda's grave, and Sullivan is seen reuniting with Rebecca. In a post-credit scene, Leanne, Zephyr and Vashryon explore the now-clean world beyond Basel, and Leanne's quartz is revealed to have been safely embedded in her hand.

Development

Development on Resonance of Fate took place over three years, beginning around 2007, using the codename "Project Cobra".[16] The game was developed by tri-Ace, whose other notable games included Valkyrie Profile and the Star Ocean series.[17][18] It was directed by Takayuki Suguro, produced by Mitsuhiro Shimano and Jun Yoshino, and programmed by Yuichiro Kitao and Yoshiharu Gotanda.[11] At the start of development, the team decided upon the key concepts: a story focusing on the world's fate, a setting where human life was "managed" and a limited number of characters, a unified setting that was expansive while not being open world, and a combat system that revolved around firearms. During the planning stages, production time and costs were taken in account, and all the features were carefully planned and chosen so as little content as possible needed to be cut.[19][20] According to Suguro, the game began development on Xbox 360 because it was the first major seventh generation console to be released, and it was relatively easy to develop games on the system.[7] It was ported to the PlayStation 3 later in production.[21]

A key element of the gameplay is its focus on guns over swords and magic. When deciding upon the game's basics, the team wanted to create a cinematic feeling in battles. If they had gone with a more traditional battle system, then it would have quickly lost its cinematic appeal due to the resultant necessity for close combat. Likewise, they wanted the cinematic feel to persist throughout the whole game rather than being restricted to cutscenes. A major challenge was to strike a balance between accessibility and difficulty when developing for a hardcore fanbase that might be made of up of action game and RPG players. This resulted in the addition of strategy elements.[17][22][23] Another wish was to create something new and fresh in the RPG market. When creating the gameplay style, the team looked at action movies such as The Matrix and Rebellion during their research.[24] Despite its high-action appearances, the game relies heavily upon strategic, turn-based gameplay. During early development, the game was based on a real-time system and meant for only one character to be controlled by the player; the other two would have been handled by the game's artificial intelligence (AI). After some testing, they decided that this would create unwanted difficulties in gameplay such as characters dying off-screen without the player noticing or the AI not directing them properly.[7]

On designing the battle system, Kitao said that the two main aims for him were creating something never before seen in an RPG and designing something accessible and challenging. Adjustments to the battle system went on all through development, with some changes being made at the very last minute. The gun customization system was originally a puzzle-based system, but was later converted to a diagram set-up. Weapons were originally going to be represented in three-dimensions, but technical issues prevented this. On the whole, the development was a taxing one for him.[25] The most difficult part about incorporating guns into the system was creating a workable system that did not rely on first-person and third-person shooter mechanics.[26] The two types of damage and various special moves in the game were born from the team's discussions about how the three playable characters might be directed to work in unison, dealing different types of attacks. Being able to attack while moving was inspired by a suggestion from staff members stemming from more traditional pure action games and scenes from Hollywood action films. For the camera, the team decided to balance it between limited control during player turns and a more dynamic feel during attacks.[21]

The game was developed using an in-house multi-platform proprietary engine called ASKA (tri-Ace Superlative Knowledge-based Architecture), developed by a team led by Gotanda. The engine was development since 2005 and was used for three different games in tandem: Resonance of Fate, Infinite Undiscovery and Star Ocean: The Last Hope. The game employed multiple advanced graphics and lighting techniques, including high-dynamic-range rendering, and multiple layered shader tools to manage graphical layers and shadow effects.[18] Motion blur effects were implemented using techniques similar to that implemented for the second-generation CryEngine. Creating realistic blurring during camera movement was complicated by graphical inconsistencies generated by ASKA's structure. A separate graphics buffer system was designed to address the issue.[27] The number of polygons in each scene was estimated at a relatively low 350,000 for environments and characters in both cutscenes and gameplay. In contrast, character models for the main cast and important NPCs were estimated at 30,000 to 40,000 polygons compared to 5,000 to 8,000 used in the PlayStation 2 era. The main characters' faces used 40 bones for facial movement, while their hair used 250. This enabled high facial expression compared to the "doll"-like facial movements of earlier video game characters. Character hair used additional shaders and layered textures to give it lifelike appearance and behavior. The physical simulation was similar to that used for Valkyrie Profile 2: Silmeria, but were improved and expanded to suit the new hardware capacities.[18] There were minor differences between the graphical effects and performances of the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 titles. Shadow and blurring effects were more sophisticated on 360.[27] The estimated frame rate of 30fps was identical across both versions.[18] While the staff were satisfied with its performance, its main difficulty was its in-built versatility.[26] In addition to short load times, the team also fitted all the game's content onto a single disc for both versions. This was due to staff not wanting players to know when they had reached the halfway point, prolonging the sense of adventure.[28]

Scenario and design

The story and script were created by Suguro and Masaki Norimoto, and the script was written by Norimoto and Yasushi Otake.[11][29][30] For Norimoto, his first real challenge was taking the story's themes—conflicts between justice and evil, the nature of God, and destiny—which were fairly common in RPGs, and put an original spin on them. He also did not want to create specific heroes and villains, blurring the lines between friend and foe and having each character following their own understandable agenda.[31] The team decided upon a steampunk aesthetic over a science fiction setting as the latter would necessitate an overly-distant far future setting. It was also chosen as the steampunk effect was a rarity in video games.[17] The choice of a more realistic setting was also influenced by the gun-based gameplay.[7] The Zenith System was conceived as equivalent to a supercomputer from science fiction, which also tied into the story elements surrounding Zenith's control of humanity. The choice to make Zenith an impartial machine also stemmed from the team not wanting an off-screen third party force to distract the player from the main narrative. It was also decided to make Zenith the product of an earlier culture rather than a contemporary creation.[19] The Zenith System's influence over the fate of its people gave rise to the design motif of cogs, creating a "world of clockwork".[9][19] This motif of an inorganic force controlling humanity also fitted in with their story theme of human strength finding expression, acting as a counterweight against Zenith's influence. The overall design of Basel emulated its mechanical nature, being grim and inorganic, but dashes of color were added through references to the city's religion to balance this out.[19]

The character designs and world design were handled by art director Kentaro Kagami, and artist and graphics designer Masashi Nakagawa.[11][32] The first character to be envisioned, before most of the game's concepts had been finalized, was Leanne. The second was Zephyr, who was nicknamed "Boy of the Demonic Possession". The third was Vashyron, who was named "ultimate gentleman". While originally conceived as a "glistening" character, he was reworked as a big brother figure, which in turn led to the scene where he and Zephyr first fought. Rowen's early artwork represented his position as an authority figure looking down on the world from the Zenith System. According to Kagami, his character artwork was created in consultation with Norimoto and Suguro.[30] The three main characters went through multiple design revisions. While Zephyr and Vashyron were designed to reflect the grim environment of Basel, Leanne was meant to contrast against them.[32] Zephyr was initially a lighter, less antagonistic character due to him being younger than Leanne. In contrast to other characters, Vashyron's design went through a fairly smooth development process, with his clothing remaining consistent through the design phase.[33] Leanne's clothing took a long time to finalize: earlier versions of her were based on a concept of her being fashion conscious, but this made her look odd next to the other characters.[34] The small cast was something decided upon at an early stage, along with adjusting the male characters to appear less feminine than others from Japanese RPGs. The latter change was made with a Western audience in mind.[20][23]

Audio

The music for Resonance of Fate was composed by Motoi Sakuraba and Kōhei Tanaka: Sakuraba had done work on multiple titles for tri-Ace titles, while Tanaka's most notable recent work was on the Sakura Wars series for Sega. Their work began in 2009.[9][35] The two composers were approached about their collaboration on Resonance of Fate by tri-Ace and Sega respectively. Sakuraba was originally going to compose 41 tracks for the game, but during development the number increased to 77. Tanaka's contribution amounted to between 30 and 40 tunes. Sakuraba was told to make the music in an old-fashioned style with no clear leitmotifs, while Tanaka had great freedom.[36] One of the requests given by tri-Ace and Sega was that their music tracks should contrast with each other. Sakuraba handled the game's battle music, with many of his tracks using a strong rock music element using synthesizers meant to emulate music from the 1960s and 70s. Some of his pieces were deliberately outside his usual style, using analog synthesizer and electric piano and recording the resultant sound after it had been fed through leslie speakers. He also worked against custom by improvising some pieces. Tanaka composed tracks for cutscenes, town areas, and the title theme; he was asked to focus on "regal orchestra" instrumentation. Rather than using an official Japanese orchestral, he recorded his music with a group of studio musicians at Hitomi Memorial Hall. The result not only portrayed a grand impressing through the recording environment, but produced an effect similar to an overseas orchestra.[35]

Japanese voice recording for the game began two years before its release in 2008. After being cast, each voice actor was both given directions for their performances and contributed to the characters' portrayals. They had been associated with other notable video games: several actors had previously worked on first Star Ocean and Valkyrie Profile, along with anime series such as Case Closed. Many actors enjoyed their experience, as the game gave them the opportunity for a large range of performances, from comedic to dramatic scenes. Many characters were revised based on suggestions given by their voice actors during recording.[21] Overall, the experience for both actors and development staff was a positive one.[15][37] The English voice recording began in August 2009 under the supervision of Sega.[13][38] Recording took place at studios in Los Angeles, and was overseen by Shimato and Suguro. Speaking about his view of the three main actors, Shimato was favorably impressed, praising DiCocco's range and expression for Leanne and noting Menville's performances as Zephyr required fewer retakes than other actors.[13]

Release

Resonance of Fate was first hinted at prior to April 2009, then announced as an untitled "mystery" RPG at the beginning of the month. According to Shimano, its codename "Project Cobra" had been bandied about prior to the reveal, but no-one had suspected anything about its true nature.[16][39] Its official Japanese title, along with details such as tri-Ace's partnership with Sega, were unveiled on April 8, 2009.[39] Resonance of Fate marked the first collaboration between tri-Ace and Sega—most of tri-Ace's previous recent games had been published by Square Enix. The reason for the choice was two-fold: tri-Ace wanted a different publisher due to the radical nature of their new game, and Sega wanted a title to break into the RPG market. As Resonance of Fate seemed unique enough to stand out in the market, Sega agreed to take up publishing duties.[24][38] According to staff, the Japanese title was originally going to be either Resonance of Fate or Resonance of Time, but Sega asked it to be changed to End of Eternity. This fell in line with a trend among many Japanese games of referencing endings in their titles.[23] It was officially announced for a Western release in May 2009.[40] The game released in Japan on January 28, 2010.[41] It respectively released on March 16, 18 and 26 in North America, Australia and Europe.[42][43][44] The European version came with text localization in English, French, German, Spanish and Italian.[38]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
MetacriticPS3: 72/100[45]
X360: 74/100[46]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Eurogamer8 out of 10 [47]
Famitsu34 out of 40[48]
GameSpot8.5 out of 10 [49]
GameTrailers8.0 out of 10 [50]
IGN7.0 out of 10 [51]
OPM (US)
RPGFan88%[52]

Resonance of Fate received "mixed" reviews, according to video game review aggregator Metacritic.[45][46] The game launched in Japan with 145,000 copies sold in the first week across both platforms but dropped off Media Create's top 30 list within a month.[53][54] Critics were most vocal in their praise of the gameplay and battle system. Eurogamer called its innovative design "one of the most inspired approaches to the role-playing video game seen in a decade."[47] IGN stated that "the battle system in Resonance of Fate is strong enough to hold everything together" and added "the unique combat system steps up to be the star of the show."[51] GameSpot noted that "the cinematography used during hero actions is so over-the-top and exciting to watch that it makes battles a joy to take part in."[49] But some critics noted that "the flow of combat in Resonance of Fate is initially confusing, especially if you don't take the optional tutorial."[51] The game was the runner-up for RPGamer's Best Battle System award.[55]

Outside of the battle system, GameSpot commented that the world map's "sparsely detailed overhead view gives the impression of a board game, and you need to employ a puzzle-game mind-set to effectively use your limited pieces to clear the appropriate number of tiles. It's an interesting way to open up new places to explore, and it even ties in to the combat". Critics also praised the weapon customization system, "the weapon upgrade system puts a unique spin on traditional standards. Although you do earn the occasional new gun, you spend more time enhancing your current firearm."[49] RPGamer gave the game its Most Original award, for presenting "a gaming experience unlike any this past year", including a "unique battle system" emphasizing strategic combat, the strategic way in which "the world map was opened up", the ability to "modify almost every aspect of the characters' appearances", and "the way that its story is told." The game was also the second runner-up for RPGamer's Best Console RPG and Most Overlooked awards.[55]

The story, on the other hand, received mixed reviews though some critics looked past these flaws. GameSpot wrote that "the story in Resonance of Fate is told in a drawn-out, stilted way that only reveals its agenda dozens of hours into your quest" but what "makes this story engaging even before your ultimate goal becomes clear is that the characters are well-developed and easy to relate to," concluding that the "quirky story provides laughs and drama."[49] Destructoid noted that "Resonance of Fate builds its world mostly through inference and implication rather than exposition" and added "the main plot being somewhat threadbare, it never really ascends to the kind of epic scale one would expect from the genre."[3] RPGamer praised the storytelling, stating that it uses "a futuristic sci-fi setting as a backdrop to tell the story of its main characters" who are "trying to survive in a futuristic world gone mad." It chose the game as the runner-up for its Best Script award, for bringing the "characters to life" and "doing an amazing job with the localization." The game was also the runner-up for RPGamer's Best Voice Acting award.[55]

Critics gave mixed reviews about the game's graphics and pacing. Destructoid stated that "while detailed, most environments alternate between concrete gray and brick red."[3] GameSpot also noted the "lack of visual variety."[49] IGN added that "the world map and dungeons are crying for more detail."[51] But some critics added that "the colorful clothing helps offset the game's otherwise limited palette."[3] IGN disliked the fact that "large difficulty spikes are interjected every now and then" and "Resonance of Fate is built for those that enjoy the grind."[51] Other critics such as the GameSpot reviewer liked this aspect of the game, "You need to use every trick you have learned, and a few you may not have even realized yet, to tackle these treacherous monsters, but there is nothing quite as sweet as toppling something that has tormented you for so long."[49]

Legacy

An artbook named End of Eternity Design Works was released on June 11, 2010 in Japan.[56] Published by Enterbrain, Inc.,[57] this 176-page artbook is divided in four chapters: Character, Enemy, World view and Benefits.[58]

Resonance of Fate characters and costumes make appearances in a number of other Sega games. In 2010's Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA 2nd, Vocaloid Kagamine Rin can obtain a Leanne outfit. Zephyr, Vashyron, and Leanne are the three characters representing Resonance of Fate in Project X Zone, a Namco-Capcom-Sega mega-crossover video game for the Nintendo 3DS.[59][60] Zephyr and Leanne are a Pair Unit while Vashyron is a Solo Unit. Various enemies from Resonance of Fate also appear as enemy units. The trio returns in Project X Zone 2, this time with Zephyr and Vashyron being the Pair Unit and Leanne as the Solo Unit. Cardinal Garigliano also appears in the game as an non-playable character.[61]

In 2012, Jostein Johnsen of 1UP.com credited the game with redefining the turn-based battle system, attempting to turn it "into an interactive animated film." According to Johnsen, what "we are really seeing here is a proto-attempt at a live and interactive animated sequence. A sequence where the player decides what happened, and what attacks were used to slay the cardboard cutouts on the left." He credited the game for "saving the JRPG" and "truly renewing it for more advanced technology."[62]

References

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