Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy
Genre: Puzzle
Publisher: Level-5
Nintendo
Developer: Level-5
Release: February 28, 2014
After two years, Level-5 has finally released the final
chapter in the Professor Layton series with Professor Layton and the Azran
Legacy. It is the final prequel in the
series that will lead into the first game release which was Professor Layton
and the Curious Village. While making
the games, the studio decided to do prequels and that started with The Last
Specter. The story has developed so much
since the first game that we have grown to know and love all the characters and
expect for some easy and challenging puzzles.
The Azran Legacy is the second game to be released in the
series for the Nintendo 3DS and although the game can be played in 3D, I found
myself getting dizzy when shifting my eyes from the top screen to the bottom
screen. After about 15 or 20 minutes, I
turned off the 3D on my system and played the game in 2D. There were cutscenes that I watched in 3D and
I would say to save the 3D for those screens and during actual gameplay to
leave it on 2D. It will give you less of
a headache while playing the game.
The graphics were exactly what I expected and wanted in the
game because it was the cel-shaded graphics which popped more during the times
that the 3DS was in 3D mode and they didn’t try to change what has worked in
every other game in the series. I
probably would have asked Level 5 for a bit more coloring on some of the
landscape and background scenery. Don’t
get me wrong, it was pleasing to look at but it just seemed very flat and I
would have liked it to be more detailed than it was in the game.
In this chapter of the Professor Layton series, we find
ourselves following Hershel Layton, Emmy, and Luke on an adventure to find the
mystery of the Azran’s and stop the antagonist from solving the mystery first
and causing all pandemonium to break loose.
During the story, Layton, Emmy and Luke are sent to all different parts
of the world in order to find the Azran Eggs and unlock the mystery behind
them. At the start of the game, Layton
and crew are meeting up with Professor Sycamore in an ice cavern where a
mysterious girl is frozen in ice. This
girl aids the crew in their adventure and helps them to solve the history and
mystery of the Azran. What I loved about
this story, compared to previous games, was that more was explained and I believe
this was done because it was concluding the story. I think if I was part of the development team
I would have pushed more for different puzzles in the game than just some of
the repeat puzzles they did with a different story behind the puzzle.
Like every Layton game in the series, there are over 125
different puzzles in the game and in order to continue in the game you have to
solve a certain amount to move onto the next stage of events. All the puzzles vary in difficulty and are
once again valued in Picarats. The more
picarats you get throughout the game the more items you unlock to play after
beating the story. In order to find the
puzzles throughout the game you still have to tap the bottom screen on the 3DS
at different areas to talk to people who give puzzles or to find hidden
puzzles. After about an hour or two of
doing this, it does get annoying and monotonous but its what we should expect
since it’s been that way for every game in the series. You are still allowed to use hint coins in order
to help solve puzzles and Level-5 brought back the Super hint which costs 2
hint coins to help on those puzzles that really stump you.
While playing the game, I didn’t see anything different from
previous games in the series except that there was more puzzles outside of your
normal puzzles worth Picarats. They
actually had a lot more puzzles to solve that involved answering questions with
a specific answer. Also I liked that
there was a time in the game where you were able to shoot rockets at targets. Granted it was puzzle based in order to shoot
them but it was a nice change in the series.
The Azran Legacy was the longest Professor Layton game that
I have played. I have beaten all of them
and the average time it took me to complete the games was around 10 hours with
the Azran Legacy clocking in at just over 13 hours. It was worth all that time because I have
grown to love the series since its first version on the DS.
I am very sad to hear that there will most likely not be any
more Professor Layton games for the DS or 3DS but I’m hoping that they will
change over to the WiiU since the WiiU gamepad does have a touchscreen and I
think it will go well with what the series has done. Level-5 please continue the series and just
make some changes to the game so that it isn’t all the same just with a new
story.
+ Simplified cel-shaded graphics that make the characters pop
+ Enough puzzles to test the mind and still be fun and not frustrating
+ Story was engaging and kept me wanting to play
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-Music is lacking and repetitive
-Having to tap the screen every second to find something
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1 comment:
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