
TORONTO -- "Yo-Kai Watch" might be the biggest game you've
never heard of.
The Nintendo 3DS title has become big business in Japan, spawning a
television show, comic books and a popular line of toys. A second animated film
is scheduled to be released in Japan next month.
Two years after its Japanese release, Nintendo is bringing "Yo-Kai
Watch" to North America. Like the popular "Pokemon" games,
"Yo-Kai Watch" will have gamers scouring the land to find unique
critters to add to their collections.
"Yo-Kai Watch" begins with a young boy named Nate Adams, who
is characterized as being painfully average, heading into the woods in search
of rare insects. Instead he meets a friendly (if slightly irritating) spirit
named Whisper, who gives Nate a "yo-kai watch," a device that allows
him to see other yokai, spirits who are often mischievous, sometimes benevolent
and occasionally frighteningly evil.
There are over 200 unique yokai to be found in the game, ranging from
cute anthropomorphic animals to a comically grotesque dog with the face of a
Japanese businessman. The number of yokai pales in comparison to the roster of
creatures in the Pokemon universe, but that franchise has had a decade-long
head start.
Nate can befriend yokai in different ways. Sometimes a spirit will join
the cause through negotiation, and other times Nate will make in impression
through combat.
The fighting mechanics of "Yo-Kai Watch" are alternately
simple and chaotic. Nate can have six yokai active at one time in a ring
formation, with the top three fighting and the other three in reserve.
Characters can be swapped out on the fly by rotating the ring with the stylus.
Positioning yokai of the same type next to each other will give the team a
boost.
While the yokai attack by themselves with no input, there is still a lot
the gamer has to be aware of. Yokai can become "inspirited," which
has the opposite effect of what you expect. An inspirited yokai will be given a
negative status effect and will need to be swapped out and "purified"
by winning a short mini-game.
Yokai can also fill up soul metres during combat. Once full, they can
unleash their "Soultimate" attack, again through the completion of a
mini-game. Taking care of these mini-games while also keeping an eye on what's
going on in the overall fight can occasionally overwhelm.
But ultimately combat is simply a part of the real draw of the game --
finding and befriending the various yokai. While Pokemon had Pikachu, the
lightning-powered rodent who became the face of the franchise, the Yo-Kai Watch
series may already have its equivalent.
The breakout star appears to be Jibanyan, the ghost of a cat who was hit
by a truck while trying to cross an intersection. He now tries to get revenge
on trucks by challenging them to fights, with disastrous results.
Whether or not "Yo-Kai Watch" can reach Pokemon-like
popularity across the Pacific remains to be seen. Yokai are spirits specific to
Japanese folklore, and there is always a danger of a cultural disconnect when
introducing such traditional concepts to a new market.
This might not pose a problem for "Yo-kai Watch," which treats
its traditional and supernatural elements with a light hand. While the yokai
from Japanese folklore can be monstrous, the game adopts a strictly comic tone.
A mildly unsettling example is a whole quest line that revolves around
retrieving an old man's underwear.
The spirits in "Yo-Kai Watch" are responsible for little more
than arguments or regrettable bodily functions, and usually they will befriend
Nate after they are exposed and taught some manners.
The core game of "Yo-Kai Watch" is geared for a younger
audience, but anyone who enjoys games where the ultimate goal is to "catch
them all" should be suitably satisfied by the latest craze from across the
Pacific.
Curtis Withers, The Canadian Press
No comments:
Post a Comment