Mana (series): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (update links)
m (update links)
Line 109: Line 109:
* [[Insurmountable Waist High Fence]] - Bushes, rocks, or even just mildly rough terrain can prove impassable; in [[Seiken Densetsu 3]], the entrance to the dwarf cave is blocked by an insurmountable ''optical illusion'' that cannot be bypassed unless you talk to an NPC and then use the Wisp elemental to remove said illusion.
* [[Insurmountable Waist High Fence]] - Bushes, rocks, or even just mildly rough terrain can prove impassable; in [[Seiken Densetsu 3]], the entrance to the dwarf cave is blocked by an insurmountable ''optical illusion'' that cannot be bypassed unless you talk to an NPC and then use the Wisp elemental to remove said illusion.
* [[Interface Spoiler]] - in [[Children of Mana]] with your empty weapon slots and to a lesser extent, the gems.
* [[Interface Spoiler]] - in [[Children of Mana]] with your empty weapon slots and to a lesser extent, the gems.
* [[In Universe Game Clock]] - [[Seiken Densetsu 3]] has both a Day/Night cycle and a weekly cycle tied into character stats, types of monsters spawned, and which [[NPC|NPCs]] are active; [[Legend of Mana]] has a weekly cycle whose only obvious effect is which teachers are in session at the Geo academy and whether you can recruit Pearl or {{spoiler|Blackpearl}} in the Bejeweled City after you've finished the Jumi arc.
* [[In-Universe Game Clock]] - [[Seiken Densetsu 3]] has both a Day/Night cycle and a weekly cycle tied into character stats, types of monsters spawned, and which [[NPC|NPCs]] are active; [[Legend of Mana]] has a weekly cycle whose only obvious effect is which teachers are in session at the Geo academy and whether you can recruit Pearl or {{spoiler|Blackpearl}} in the Bejeweled City after you've finished the Jumi arc.
* [[Killer Rabbit]]:
* [[Killer Rabbit]]:
** the [[Bonus Boss]] in [[Seiken Densetsu 3]]
** the [[Bonus Boss]] in [[Seiken Densetsu 3]]

Revision as of 01:37, 31 December 2014

World of Mana, also known as the Seiken Densetsu (Legend of the Holy Sword) series, is a group of (mostly) action RPGs, most of which also tenuously share a setting. Most of the games center around a Mana Tree, the source of magic in the world, and the eponymous Mana Sword.

Games in the series include

Manga in the series include

  • Seiken Densetsu Legend of Mana (2000, by Shiro Amano, based off the game of the same name; later collected into a 2-volume set in 2008)
  • Princess of Mana (2007, 5-volume work by Satsuki Yoshino, set 300 years after Children of Mana and 310 years after Dawn of Mana)

Novels in the series include

  • Seiken Densetsu Legend of Mana - Amata no Tsuchi, Amata no Hito (2000, by Hiromi Hosae; a novelisation of Legend of Mana)


Unfortunately, to some extent the Kingdom Hearts and Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles series have usurped the World of Mana's place in the Square Enix pantheon, with the aforementioned games featuring the 3D version of the three-character action RPG gameplay that the World of Mana series was once known for. This has caused Square Enix to start scrambling to find a different genre for the World of Mana series, such as the RTS Heroes of Mana and pure action game Dawn of Mana, the latter of which was extremely poorly received and criticized. It appears the series has jumped a shark.

Tropes used in Mana (series) include: