Lunar: The Silver Star/YMMV


 * Evil Is Sexy: Oh, yes. Xenobia is all about this. Also,
 * Follow the Leader: The prevalence of flutes and ocarinas in Zelda series may have had some influence on the decision to change Alex's instrument of choice from a harp (in The Silver Star) to an ocarina (in the remakes). Which makes it kind of ironic that Link acquired a magical harp in Oracle of Ages.
 * Game Breaker: Alex in the original Lunar: The Silver Star. By the end of the game, he will have the highest HP, MP, physical damage, magic damage, defense, and is a decent healer.
 * White Dragon Protect is pretty costly to cast, but defends each party member from one attack. In Harmony, Mia's Limit Break is even worse as it protects each member from multiple attacks, not just one.
 * The final boss viciously punishes you if you get complacent with Mist Barrier, though. Use it, and he uses an attack called Blast Loci on the last turn it's active. What does it do? It makes the next spell he cast change into one that does 1,200 HP of damage. For comparison, Kyle's HP at the level cap (the highest in the game) is 276. There is no way not to die from this.
 * In Harmony, Luna's Limit Break heals all hp/mp. Think of the implications of this when the PS version pretty much doesn't have Limit Breaks (especially the part about MP), it means you can basically use everyone's techniques without shopping for potions, where in the PS version you need to keep buying super-expensive Star Lights.
 * Lunar Legend doesn't bother to remember what your HP and MP are when you quit the game. So you can just save and reset for free full healing anywhere.
 * Memetic Mutation: The internet-famous "Shii's Song" is a sped-up version of "Wind's Nocturne".
 * Nintendo Hard: The PS 1 version, in comparison to the PSP. The PS 1 hasn't the same item storage style, meaning less space. They also haven't limit breaks, meaning bosses are much harder (since you can't rely on Luna's Limit for most of the game to restore mp, or any of the attack Limits in battle). Also, experience seems to be slightly slower. For a good comparison, in the first forest in Harmony, it is possible to win at least the first battle, and possibly the second (without asking for help). It's not as much to do so without the help of limit breaks, though.
 * That One Boss: Royce, in Silver Star Story/Harmony. She curses your party when you enter the dungeon, making you start every battle with two random characters asleep. Sleeping characters take double damage from attacks, and thus tend to almost instantly die in every battle. The curse doesn't end until you defeat her, and she's all the way at the end of a rather long dungeon. It's entirely possible that your main damage dealing character (Alex), and healer (Jessica) will be asleep at the beginning of the fight with her, get instantly killed, and then she'll immobilize your other characters for several turns while she kills them.
 * One trick that simplifies this: By this point, you should have a Fresh Ring (cancels Sleep) and the Tri-Ring (cancels all status effects). Give them to Alex and Jessica, and you're basically insured from getting screwed over.
 * They Changed It Now It Sucks: Half of the fanbase attitude towards Lunar Legend. The one for the PSP even more so thanks to there being a bunch of changed and/or new additions. People have gone so far as to judge the game by its demo alone. Others denounced the game the very moment they learned Working Designs (or rather its members) weren't involved in the localisation. Especially nonsensical in Silver Star Harmony's case, considering Xseed used Working Design's script with a few alterations.
 * Was also the case to some degree with the PSX version since it changed several important plot points from the original Sega CD.
 * Definitely a YMMV, having played the PSP version first.
 * The Untwist / The Not Secret: The game doesn't even try to make Luna's real origins a secret. Doubly so in the PSP version, where.
 * Not to mention the PSP has the entire opening scene in the start, while the PS 1 version skips to Alex.