Jump to content

Fragile Dreams: Farewell Ruins of the Moon: Difference between revisions

tropelist
m (update links)
(tropelist)
Line 1:
{{work}}
[[File:178880_3956.jpg|frame]]
 
 
{{quote|''Despite a planet so vast...''
Line 8 ⟶ 7:
''This is dedicated to those that share the same feeling of isolation.''|Excerpt from the North American trailer of ''Fragile Dreams''}}
 
'''[[Fragile Dreams: Farewell Ruins of the Moon']]'' (フラジール [[さよなら月の廃墟]], ''Fragile: Sayonara Tsuki no Haikyo'') is a third-person [[Action RPG]]/[[Adventure Game]] developed by Tri-Crescendo, the same team who made [[Eternal Sonata]] and had a hand with the [[Baten Kaitos]] games. Released on the [[Nintendo Wii]], the story tells of an [[After the End]] scenario, where the world's population has vanished and their cities have been abandoned. The [[Player Character]] Seto has just buried the old man he's been living with, and upon reading a letter from him encouraging Seto to go seek out other survivors, he packs up and heads to the "[[Tokyo Tower|red tower to the east]]." During his journey, he finds a [[White-Haired Pretty Girl|silver-haired girl named Ren]], the [[Ridiculously Human Robot|motherly Personal Frame (PF)]], the [[Jerkass|mischievous Crow]], an [[Mysterious Waif|enigmatic ghost named Sai]], a [[Cute Ghost Girl|quiet spirit named Chiyo]], the [[Intrepid Merchant|recurring chicken-head-wearing Item Merchant]] and {{spoiler|the [[Mad Scientist]]}} Shin.
 
That's practically it, really - ''Fragile Dreams'' is marketed as an "atmospheric adventure," focusing on "human drama" and emotion. While it plays similarly to a [[Survival Horror]] game, it's not horror outright, instead settling for being eerie, sad, lonely, depressing and (rarely) disquieting, while also relying heavily on the player's ability to draw his or her own [[Fridge Horror|conclusions]] about why most things are they way they are.
Line 15 ⟶ 14:
 
----
{{tropelist}}
=== ''Fragile Dreams'' contains examples of: ===
 
* [[American Kirby Is Hardcore]] - In addition to using deeper, mature voices for the younger characters in the localization, the American box art sports a vicious-looking Seto holding a golf club, whereas the original Japanese and European box arts show Seto and Ren holding hands over a watery background. Should you feel Japanophilic, XSEED included the latter art on the backside of the American game cover.
** Though perhaps a little justified in that the localization was (poorly) marketed as some sort of post-apocalyptic adventure as opposed to a more emotional experience.
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.