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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Gameplay  



1.1  Battle system  





1.2  Non-linearity  







2 Story  





3 Games  





4 References  





5 External links  














Langrisser






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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this articlebyadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Langrisser" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR
(December 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Langrisser

The series logo used in all games from Langrisser III onward, including remakes.

Genre(s)

Tactical role-playing

Developer(s)

Masaya Games (1991–1996)
Career Soft (1996–1998)
Zlongame (2017–present)

Publisher(s)

Nippon Computer Systems (1991–2014)
Extreme Games (2014–present)

Artist(s)

Satoshi Urushihara

Composer(s)

Noriyuki Iwadare

Platform(s)

Mega Drive, Sega Saturn, Dreamcast, PC-FX, Super Famicom, Nintendo 3DS, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, Microsoft Windows, WonderSwan, iOS, Android, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch

First release

Langrisser: The Descendants of Light
April 26, 1991

Latest release

Langrisser I & II Remake
2019

Langrisser (ラングリッサー, Rangurissā, originally spelled Lungrisser prior to the third game) is a fantasy tactical role-playing video game series created by Masaya Games. The main development team is Career Soft, first as Team Career within Masaya Games for the first three games and then as an independent studio for Langrisser IV and V. The series has a fantasy-Germanic setting, but draws on religious concepts like ditheism and sword worship for historical context. The series was originally released for Sega platforms during the 1990s, with the first two installments originally made for the Mega Drive, followed by third through fifth installments (along with a remake compilation of the first two games) for the Sega Saturn. Ports and remakes were also made for other platforms such as PC Engine, Super Famicom, PC-FX and PlayStation during the same period.

After separating from Masaya following the release of Langrisser V, Career Soft would produce an unofficial successor in the form of the Growlanser series, published and owned by Atlus, while Masaya would go on to produce Langrisser Millenium with a different development team (Santa Entertainment).[1]

Gameplay[edit]

Langrisser is divided into Scenarios, each of which reveals a portion of the story through battle interaction. The series set itself apart from other tactical RPGs in its time with larger-scale battles, where the player can control over thirty units at one time and fight against scores of enemies.[2]

Battle system[edit]

At the outset of battle, military commanders are positioned on the game's map and units are hired. Combat always follows a system of turns. In the first two games, any unit can be moved at any time during the player's turn, but each unit can only be moved once. In the last two games, a clock was introduced and units were moved in turn according to agility. A unit's commander class dictates the radius of its command range. Units battling within this command range receive a bonus to their attack and defense due to proximity to the commander. Commanders can recover life using a specific command depending on the game. In the first game the Treat Command will recover 3 health points. In later versions of the game the Treat Command is replaced by the Heal command which recovers 3 health points (HP) and 2 magic points. A commander's troops recover by being positioned directly around the commander. Each will recover 3 HP at the start of a turn.

Units work on an affinity system. Fliers are strong to soldiers but weak to bowmen. Soldiers are strong to pikemen but weak to cavalry. Cavalry are strong to soldiers and weak to pikemen. Holy units are strong against demon units. Seafaring units get a tactical advantage when attacking from water. The game engine used in Langrisser III is a considerable departure from the rest of the series, relying on mass battles between a commander's entire platoon against his enemy's.

Non-linearity[edit]

Since Der Langrisser, the series offered non-linear branching paths and multiple endings. The player's choices and actions in Der Langrisser affected which of four different paths they followed, either aligning themselves with one of three different factions or fighting against all of them. Each of the four paths leads to a different ending and there are over 75 possible scenarios. Langrisser III introduced a relationship system similar to dating sims. Depending on the player's choices and actions, the feelings of the female allies will change towards the player character, who will end up with the female ally he is closest with.[3]

Story[edit]

El Sallia, since time immemorial, has been influenced by the power of "gods". The evil gods were originally their own tribe, and over time one rose to power to dominate all the others. He was the dark god, Chaos, worshiped by the devil tribe. Conversely, Lushiris, a goddess of light, was worshiped by the humans. Each god has its own avatar to exercise its power in the human world and prepare for its coming. Chaos' avatar is Böser (German: "evil one"), a prince of darkness who is really the trapped soul of a damned human. Lushiris' avatar is Jessica, a magician. Each avatar has been entrusted with a sword that carries the weight of the gods' powers. Böser is responsible for Alhazard, and Jessica is responsible for Langrisser. By choosing a champion for the swords in each era, they influence the world in an endless series of wars. Langrisser itself is a copy of Alhazard made in ancient times and bound to the soul of Sieghart, the first king to rule Elthlead, later called Baldea, as a Descendant of Light.

The series includes ties to Team Career's earlier strategy games. The storyline of Elthlead and its sequel Gaia no Monshō (both released in 1987) depict Sieghart's battles against Böser for the power of Gaia, which serve as the backstory of the original Langrisser (with Böser appearing as the antagonist for all three games). The titular ancient mech from Gaiflame (which is set in the distant future) makes an appearance in Langrisser IV along with other mechs used by the player in the same game.

Games[edit]

Release timeline

1991

Langrisser: The Descendants of Light

1992

1993

1994

Langrisser II

1995

1996

Langrisser III

1997

Langrisser IV

1998

Langrisser V: The End of Legend

1999

Langrisser Millennium

2000

Langrisser Millennium: The Last Century

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Langrisser Tri-Swords

2013

2014

2015

Langrisser Re:Incarnation Tensei

2016

2017

2018

2019

Langrisser Mobile

Main series

Until 2016, the only game in the series to be officially localized to English was the original Langrisser, released under the title Warsong for the Genesis. Fan translations of Langrisser II (Mega Drive), Der Langrisser (Super Famicom) and Langrisser IV (PlayStation) have been released online. Langrisser Re:Incarnation Tensei, the Nintendo 3DS revival of the series, was localized by Aksys Games in 2016. Langrisser Mobile and Langrisser I & II Remake were also localized in English.

Other games

Compilations

Langrisser: Dramatic Edition is a Sega Saturn portofLangrisser and Langrisser II (these were the versions that were ported to Windows by Unbalance in 1998). Langrisser Tribute is a box set with all five games for the Sega Saturn.

Predecessor: Elthlead trilogy

References[edit]

  1. ^ "ゲームコンテンツ事業". 株式会社サンタエンタテイメント (in Japanese).
  • ^ Kurt Kalata, Langrisser, Hardcore Gaming 101
  • ^ Kurt Kalata, Langrisser (Page 2), Hardcore Gaming 101
  • External links[edit]

    Main series

  • II
  • III
  • IV
  • V: The End of Legend
  • Other games

  • Re:Incarnation Tensei
  • Related

  • Career Soft
  • Growlanser

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Langrisser&oldid=1209320669"

    Categories: 
    Langrisser
    Masaya Games games
    Video game franchises
    Tactical role-playing video games
    Tactical role-playing video games by series
    Video game franchises introduced in 1991
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja)
    Articles needing additional references from December 2015
    All articles needing additional references
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Articles containing Japanese-language text
     



    This page was last edited on 21 February 2024, at 09:28 (UTC).

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