If you’ve ever spent time with an Etrian Odyssey title, or any of the aforementioned releases from NIS, you’ll feel right at home here. The heart of Dungeon Travelers 2’s gameplay lies in exploring these familiar fantasy locales, avoiding traps, and finding treasure tucked deep within their recesses. Of course, things quickly escalate when the trio finds a shattered shrine, and the party begins a quest that takes them to a variety of locales including forgotten tombs, verdant forests and monolithic towers as they work to stop the resurrection of an ancient evil. Joined by his childhood friends, the fearsome fighter Alisia and the skilled magic user Melvy, Fried embarks on a simple mission to explore a nearby cave. More than just a repository of knowledge, the Royal Library works alongside The Order to beat back the monster menace outside of Rumulea’s borders while the populace go about their daily lives unaware of the looming threat. However, on a handheld already filled to the brim with labyrinths to explore and fleshy femme fatales to ogle, does Dungeon Travelers 2 do enough to stand out from the pack?ĭungeon Travelers 2: The Royal Library & the Monster Seal puts players in the adventurer’s boots of Fried, a young Libra kingdom of Romulea’s Royal Library. Now, Atlus is the latest publisher to enter the fray with Dungeon Travelers 2: The Royal Library & the Monster Seal, developer Aquaplus’ hardcore dungeon-crawler that gained a name for itself in Japan for its deep mechanics and risque antics. Sony’s mighty black handled has become something of a refuge for these types of games, offering those on-the-go dungeon dwellers and fans of scantily-clad anime heroines a veritable smorgasbord to meet their particular gaming needs. The PlayStation Vita certainly isn’t short on dungeon-crawling RPGs or games teeming with ludicrous amounts of fan service. Much more than cheeky fan service, Aquaplus’ latest adventure delivers the goods
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