Tenshi no Present: Marl Ōkoku Monogatari

Tenshi no Present:
Marl Ōkoku Monogatari
Developer(s) Nippon Ichi
Publisher(s) Nippon Ichi
Composer(s) Tenpei Sato
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, PlayStation Network
Release date(s)

PlayStation 2

  • JP December 21, 2000

PlayStation Network

  • JP December 17, 2014
Genre(s) Role-playing video game
Mode(s) Single player

Tenshi no Present: Marl Ōkoku Monogatari (天使のプレゼント マール王国物語) is a Japanese 2000 role-playing video game from Nippon Ichi.[1] This is the first Marl Kingdom game for the PlayStation 2. Unlike the previous games in the series, this game was only released once, although a special limited edition version of the game was released concurrently.[2]

Instead of the 2D graphics of the other Marl games, Tenshi no Present uses 3D backgrounds. However, the character sprites themselves are kept 2D, much like many other Nippon Ichi games released afterwards.[2]

Story

Tenshi no Present, unlike the earlier games in the series, consists of six separate chapters, each of which features different characters from the Marl Kingdom series.[2] The chapters take place in various times before or after the stories of Rhapsody and Little Princess. These chapters often address unanswered questions from the earlier games, or provide additional insight into the characters.

Chapters

Gameplay

Tenshi no Present is a typical RPG, complete with experience points, parties of characters, and spell casting. In each chapter, the player guides different characters through their adventure, engaging in several battles along the way.

Battle

The battle system is completely different from earlier Marl games. The player's party consists of up to 12 characters divided into rows of 4.[3] The player can only have direct control of the row leaders. The other characters in each row, called "partners," cannot normally be controlled and attack randomly.[2] The only characters that can be controlled even when they are not in the front row are puppets, and they can only be controlled by Cornet, Cello, Kururu or Cherie.

The party consists of humans, puppet users, puppets and monsters. Each character, when acting as a partner, will raise or lower the statistics of the row leader. Depending on party organization, special attacks can be unlocked for the row leader.

Instead of paying for spells like in Little Princess, the characters use SP for spell casting.[2]

Legacy

Along with Rhapsody: A Musical Adventure and Little Princess: Marl Ōkoku no Ningyō Hime 2, this game is part of the Marl Kingdom series created by Nippon Ichi. It is also the prequel to the later Nippon Ichi game La Pucelle: Tactics. Although released on a different system with a new battle system, Tenshi no Present maintains many of the themes of the previous games. The graphics remain bright and colorful, but backgrounds are now in 3D.[2]

There is an active forum on NIS America requesting Marl Ōkoku no Ningyō Hime 2 and Tenshi no Present - Marl Oukoku Monogatari on the NIS request forum. It is believed that with enough support the games will be licensed, but NIS Americas response is currently unknown.

Soundtrack

A soundtrack of the game's song was released on February 21, 2001.[4] Like the other Marl games, the music was composed by Tenpei Sato.

Tracks:

  1. Girls, to Arms
  2. Orange Village
  3. Baby Bird
  4. Dreaming Cat
  5. Because We Will Always be Together
  6. Overture
  7. Sabato
  8. Dream Traveler
  9. I am a Cat that Lives for Love
  10. Called by the Darkness
  11. One Day, We Will Meet
  12. Boy on the Ring
  13. A World Made Just for Us
  14. Eringa Valley
  15. I Don't Believe in Unrequited Love
  16. Closed Space
  17. Cubist Freezer
  18. Miss Marl's Kingdom Contest
  19. Who's Crying Now?
  20. The War-Maiden Smiles
  21. Footsteps of Terror
  22. Emergency
  23. Arabian Beast - The Great and Terrible Wizard King
  24. Thank You

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.