Japanese RPGs: One Week, Three Translation Patches

Posted in News by rboyd on Oct 15th, 2008

Not every great game that is released in Japan is translated into English.  But some of these great games are eventually made available in English, courtesy fan translation patches — game hacks that transform the original Japanese game into a fully playable English version.  Most fan translations never get finished, as it takes a lot of time and skill to completely translate a game. When a quality one is finished, it's cause for great celebration.  This week marks the completion of not one, not two, but three high profile fan translation patches.

The first of these patches is a translation patch for Persona 2: Innocent Sin.  Persona 2's story was divided into two separate games, and the US officially got only the second part, Persona 2: Eternal Punishment.  Although Eternal Punishment summarized most of the essential information about the first part, it should be fun to find out the details.

The second of this week's patches is for Mother 3.  The Mother series may be unfamiliar to most Western gamers by its native title, but the second game was released for the Super Nintendo as Earthbound (whose protagonist, Ness, appears in Super Smash Bros.).  Though the gameplay tends toward typical Dragon Quest-style, the plot and setting are anything but standard.  The games generally take place in the modern world and parody the RPG genre.  Earthbound (Mother 2) is thus far the only one to officially make it Stateside. The original Mother was a Famicom game that Nintendo of America translated, but never released, for the NES. Mother 3, supposedly the best in the series, was also never released in the USA — probably because it was a GBA game released at a time when Nintendo was focusing on the DS in the US.  I'm really looking forward to giving Mother 2 a try, as the world needs more parody RPGs. (Earthbound and Okage: Shadow King aren't enough!)

The last of these patches is a translation patch for the Super Famicom game Lennus II.  Like Mother, we've gotten a previous game in the series in the US here under a different name, that being Paladin's Quest for Super Nintendo.  That title proved something of a misnomer, since the game is completely devoid of any paladins; the hero and heroine are both wizards. I suspect Enix wanted a name that gamers would identify as an RPG.  The first game was known for a very cool magic system: instead of having one overall magic stat, you have one stat for each of several fields of magic, and you increase each field through practice. There were also 30 different playable characters (two main characters and 28 mercenaries you could hire at various parts of the game), bizarre pastel-based graphics, and great level design.  Despite being a SNES RPG published by Enix, it was pretty obscure — sometimes I feel like I'm the only one who has ever played the thing.  I hear the sequel is even better than the first game so I'm really looking forward to playing it in a language I can understand.

These patches are applicable only via emulation, which is a legally gray area. Neither I nor Gamebits nor its affiliated parties offer any endorsements of methods or practices. It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye. Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball.

Earthbound

Posted in snes by kgagne on Sep 18th, 1995
Title  : Earthbound
Platforms  : Super NES
Publisher  : Nintendo
Game Rating  : n/a
Review by  : Ken Gagne

"This game stinks," it's advertised. It's good to know that Nintendo refers to flatulence and not game quality of EarthBound for the Super NES. 

A sequel to a Japanese role-playing game which never made it to America, EarthBound is an amazing RPG, despite its tired storyline: aliens land on Earth with conquest in mind, and you, a psychic pre-teen, must defeat them. Along the way you'll team up with a boy wonder-nerd, your dog, a neighbor, and an Asian martial artist. 

EB takes place in modern day with libraries and ATMs being sources of info and income, but this does not detract from the amusement in the least. Items you'll run across include pizza, baseball bats, and bottle rockets. The humor is skewed between the childish (farts & vomit) and perverted, but you can only chuckle at all of it. 

The graphics aren't bad, but they are extremely simple, sort of a new-age Charlie Brown look with many swirly psychedelic colors. 

The battle system is the standard menu interface, with how you approach your enemy on the map deciding who gets in the first hit. It is a tad slow, however, and requires some button- pushing to keep things moving. The inventory system is extremely limited; you can always carry the necessary items, but few extras. This is particularly frustrating since you'll often be coming across new treasures in gift boxes. 

EarthBound is relatively easy, but will keep you busy for at least a week if not more. It's a high-quality RPG with little to dislike. Go storebound and grab your copy today!


This article is copyright (c) 1995, 2007 by Ken Gagne. All rights reserved. Not to be distributed without permission.

Original publication: Boston Herald, 18-Sep-95