Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Beginnings of a saga

Ive talked up Panzer Dragoon Saga a lot in this blog but I haven't; given much attention to the other games in the franchise. Recently however I decided to rectify this....

...by watching a LongPlay of Panzer Dragoon 1 and 2 (Zwei) on YouTube.

Seriously though, it's the only way I could ever see these games in action other than shelling out a fortune for a working Saturn and the games in question. I have memories of playing a single-level demo of Zwei in a store but that's pretty much my extent with this series. But considering how a dramatic change it was for Saga to be an RPG, there must've been something there originally, right?

Okay, so let's start with Panzer Dragoon.
From the looks of it, this game isn't that remarkable from a gaming standpoint: It's short, it's working off of an arcade mentality (as in it's longevity is based on how quickly the player can do everything required), it requires quick actions and reflexes, the player is running on a set path (such is the nature of a 'rail shooter') and success is measured by how well the player did by doing the same old thing.
But what truly got my interest was the aesthetics of this game. Oh. My. God. The Aesthetics. If the game part of it was kinda weak then it's the way the game is presented that makes up for it. We have fascinating settings with sunken ruins, deserts, caves, canyons and forests. There is a language made up especially for the game. There are mech devices and ancient tech. There are airships that looked like they came straight out of Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind. There is art based off of the illustrations of the French artist Moebius. There are bosses that collapse into pieces as they are destroyed. There are Sandworms that look like they came straight out of Dune. And the music is both atmospheric and brilliant.

But what strikes me the most about this game is the world in which it's set: It's intriguing yes but it's also very vague. The opening text makes clear that this is a post-apocalyptic setting, wherein human civilization has crumbled. But the humans are living in fear of 'cyber genetic warfare' (huh?). So the humans find, and excavate, an ancient Tower and turn the tables. This in turn makes all surrounding nations (Huh?) turn on each other while fighting a 'Dark Dragon'.
It's an intriguing setup that raises a lot of questions: How did humanity survive the many years since the collapse of civilization? What the hell is this cyber genetic warfare? Who is responsible for it? If civilization collapsed then what are the other nations? Who is in them? If civilization has long collapsed shouldn't everything be a lot more disorganized? What does the Tower do? And how does the Dark Dragon fit into all of this?
Of course none of these questions are answered over the course of the game but playing the game raises even more questions: Who was the original rider of the Blue Dragon? We get his mission was to destroy the Tower but why? Who was the rider of the Other Dragon that keeps reappearing throughout the game? What was his/her story? And as for the mission to destroy the Tower, did the Blue Dragon know? Did he even need the human PC?
With such questions, it's fair to say that Panzer Dragoon delivers half a story - and still, saying it's half still feels generous. There are some ideas that certainly have some potential but most likely it is confined to the restrictions imposed by fifth-generation gaming.

So how about Panzer Dragoon Zwei?
Well clearly the game is like any true sequel: It offers more of the same but enough new additions to make it stand on it's own two feet. The graphics are better, the boss fights are just as gripping, the targeting system works better and the first two levels are ground based. There's also a berserk mode added and the PC's dragon can upgrade based on the progress the player makes.
Other than that, the game's aesthetics still prove to be the series' strength: the art direction is still beautiful, the soundtrack is still great the settings are interesting, the enemies are varied, and the designs are still as inventive as Zwei's predecessor.
Unfortunately, the setting is as vague as before. The opening text indicates that 'Many millennia have passed since the fall of the old age'. Okay, so does the old age refer to when human civilization was in flower? And if that was a thousand years ago as the first game declared, does that that mean Zwei is set so many thousand years since?
We are then told that people are living in terror of a weapon created from gene reconstruction and it's use is robbing the humans of their strength. Okay so is this the cyber genetic warfare that was mentioned in the first game? Did it replace the Tower? Is in any related to the Tower?
And speaking of the Tower it is then revealed that other nations are following the humans' lead and digging up ancient weapons to fight wars. Okay seriously, who are these 'Other Nations'? Are they humans? If they are populated by humans why are they fighting the....well... other humans?
But again, none of these questions matter because, once again, when the game gets underway, more questions arise. Why does this place hate dragons and kill them on sight? I can understand that different places may have different perceptions but the Dragons and humans were getting along so well in the last game. And for that matter, how did the PC get Lagi (the Dragon) out of the village?  Someone would've surely noticed a dragon of that size. Who destroyed the village? Why did they destroy the village? Who is this Empire? Are they connected to the 'humans'? Who is the Mecchania? Why are they after the ship?
And then there's the ending: ......I.....um....what? It was abrupt, bizarre and confusing - as if my head wasn't already loaded with enough questions. Once again however it does give the indication that the story the makers had wasn't the kind that could fit onto a single CD.

Confusion aside, the world that Panzer Dragoon and Panzer Dragoon Zwei clearly had potential. Potential that could not be confided to a singular game on a singular disc. hence we got sequels in the form of Saga and Orta. Indeed, it should be noted that Orta came with it's own encyclopedia resolving many of the questions inspired by this game series.
Still, none of these questions were actually resolved in-game - like how questions relating to the game should be. I can understand Saga going out it's way to resolve such issues but that game remains, alas, out of reach.....

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