Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA group of high school students from Seven Sisters High School must confront a villainous figure called the Joker, who is causing the spread of reality-warping rumors through the city.A group of high school students from Seven Sisters High School must confront a villainous figure called the Joker, who is causing the spread of reality-warping rumors through the city.A group of high school students from Seven Sisters High School must confront a villainous figure called the Joker, who is causing the spread of reality-warping rumors through the city.
Takehito Koyasu
- Tatsuya Suou
- (Synchronisation)
Akiko Yajima
- Maya Amano
- (Synchronisation)
Kôsuke Toriumi
- Eikichi Mishina
- (Synchronisation)
Hiroko Konishi
- Lisa Silverman
- (Synchronisation)
Tomoe Hanba
- Yukino Mayuzumi
- (Synchronisation)
Shigeru Shibuya
- Jun Kurosu
- (Synchronisation)
Jin Yamanoi
- Nyarlathotep
- (Synchronisation)
Ryûsei Nakao
- Tatsuya Sudou
- (Synchronisation)
Show Hayami
- Ginji Sasaki
- (Synchronisation)
Kumiko Watanabe
- Anna Yoshizaka
- (Synchronisation)
Mika Doi
- Junko Kurosu
- (Synchronisation)
Hikari Tachibana
- Akari Hoshi
- (Synchronisation)
Eiji Maruyama
- Kankichi Mishina
- (Synchronisation)
Junji Kitajima
- Yasuo Inoe
- (Synchronisation)
Takashi Nagasako
- Principal Hanya
- (Synchronisation)
Yoshiharu Yamada
- Hiroki Sugimoto
- (Synchronisation)
Peggy O'Neal
- Maya Amano
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
- (Angeblich)
Troy Baker
- Eikichi Mishina
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
10jpr4c7
Persona 2: Tsumi (also known as Persona 2: Innocent Sin) was an RPG video game released for the Japanese PlayStation in 1999. The Persona series is an offshoot of Megami Tensei, a popular Japanese video game series. Note that this is a different game from its sequel, Persona 2: Batsu.
The game is set in Sumaru City, Japan. A rumor is going around the city that if someone calls their own cell phone, a mysterious figure known as the Joker will answer, and grant the caller a wish. The game centers around Tatsuya Suou, a student at Seven Sisters High School; when he and his friends Eikichi and Lisa call the Joker, tragedy ensues. The three teens begin their own crusade to find out the truth behind the Joker ritual, aided by reporter Maya Amano and photographer Yukino Mayuzumi (from the first Persona). They find that the answer lies much closer to home than they'd thought...
First, the good: The plotting of the game is quite well-done. Engaging characters and an intriguing plot will keep you playing, and the gameplay is deep but easily learned, and the battle system is quite polished. The music is alternately wonderful and "bleah!", but the quality songs prevail.
The bad: When the songs are bad, they're really bad. Everything in the menu and battle systems seems to take one or two more button presses than should be necessary. Many gamers raised on the Final Fantasy series will find that this game may be sort of hard (it requires much more strategy than a lot of RPGs). And finally, the game is in Japanese, with no U.S. release on the horizon.
If you do understand Japanese even a little, and like console RPGs, I highly recommend this game. If you don't understand Japanese, I recommend its sequel, Persona 2: Batsu (released as Persona 2: Eternal Punishment in North America), instead.
The game is set in Sumaru City, Japan. A rumor is going around the city that if someone calls their own cell phone, a mysterious figure known as the Joker will answer, and grant the caller a wish. The game centers around Tatsuya Suou, a student at Seven Sisters High School; when he and his friends Eikichi and Lisa call the Joker, tragedy ensues. The three teens begin their own crusade to find out the truth behind the Joker ritual, aided by reporter Maya Amano and photographer Yukino Mayuzumi (from the first Persona). They find that the answer lies much closer to home than they'd thought...
First, the good: The plotting of the game is quite well-done. Engaging characters and an intriguing plot will keep you playing, and the gameplay is deep but easily learned, and the battle system is quite polished. The music is alternately wonderful and "bleah!", but the quality songs prevail.
The bad: When the songs are bad, they're really bad. Everything in the menu and battle systems seems to take one or two more button presses than should be necessary. Many gamers raised on the Final Fantasy series will find that this game may be sort of hard (it requires much more strategy than a lot of RPGs). And finally, the game is in Japanese, with no U.S. release on the horizon.
If you do understand Japanese even a little, and like console RPGs, I highly recommend this game. If you don't understand Japanese, I recommend its sequel, Persona 2: Batsu (released as Persona 2: Eternal Punishment in North America), instead.
This review is for the Japanese version English patched (I emulated w/ FF to nul grinding). Also if you have not played any other Persona game then it may be hard to recommend this game as it's pretty dated. I feel it takes a certain perspective and level of understanding to truly take in what Persona 2 (IS) has to offer.
The graphics are dated and the system to get battle ready is grindy, but unique with style.
Extremely well written (translated) dialog which compliments each character arc and drives the narrative to a relatable and satisfying degree. I found progressing (the story) effortless and engaging, and it's philosophical elements complementary to the characters, which reflect the actions, desires, thoughts, any person could experience. Playing Persona 3/4 first helped me appreciate the characters a lot, and the way they are portrayed/how each arc unfolds provide the foundation. Combined with touching themes and a few bopping beats and woven together with Atlus' now signature Tarot cards, this game may show you sides of yourself never consciously conceived if one is willing to accept them. Overall, it will make you laugh and cry, as it shines it's light on the burning desires of a human being.
The graphics are dated and the system to get battle ready is grindy, but unique with style.
Extremely well written (translated) dialog which compliments each character arc and drives the narrative to a relatable and satisfying degree. I found progressing (the story) effortless and engaging, and it's philosophical elements complementary to the characters, which reflect the actions, desires, thoughts, any person could experience. Playing Persona 3/4 first helped me appreciate the characters a lot, and the way they are portrayed/how each arc unfolds provide the foundation. Combined with touching themes and a few bopping beats and woven together with Atlus' now signature Tarot cards, this game may show you sides of yourself never consciously conceived if one is willing to accept them. Overall, it will make you laugh and cry, as it shines it's light on the burning desires of a human being.
Wusstest du schon
- Zitate
Tatsuya Sudou: Goddamn brat... Always... getting in my way... Beacuse of you were there... that day... my life... was ruined!
- VerbindungenFollowed by Persona 2: Batsu (2000)
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Persona 2: Innocent Sin
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Farbe
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen