The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel II (PC) review
Media sequels can fall victim to their own version of middle-child syndrome. Whereas inaugural efforts revel in world-building as well as character backstory, and concluding episodes are elevated by contributing a sense of closure, middle installments have it tougher. With context and a majority of main characters already established, they are tasked with maintaining momentum and cultivating anticipation for any concluding chapters. It’s this type of precarious predicament that The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel II faces.
Sandwiched in the middle of last August’s PC port of Trails of Cold Steel and a concluding chapter that was released last September in Japan, the title needs to both replicate the accomplishments of its predecessor while contributing enough innovation to justify its purchase price. Balancing that taunt tension, Cold Steel II also needs a narrative pay-off and the ability to set things up for its forthcoming successor. By virtue of design, the odds are stacked against developer Nihon Falcom.
But miraculously, Trails of Cold Steel II largely transcends any mid-point muddle. Structurally, the gratification from observing the uneasy formation of Class VII is diminished. Tension between Thors Military Academy aristocrats and working classes set up some provocative rivalries in the first game, and the payoff was seeing the class gradually unite and let go of their prejudices, all as a growing civil war loomed. Cold Steel II opens a month after the finale of its predecessor as protagonist Rean Schwarzer rounds up the scattered members of Class VII, effortlessly stoking the smoldering flames of nostalgia for returning Legend of Heroes players and allowing a few of Class VII’s lingering divergences to be put to rest.
While the grand narrative tackles the taunt geopolitical situations that are common to the role-playing genre, fulfillment stems from finding old friends, making a few new acquaintances, as Rean picks himself up, before gathering the troupe, and lamenting the changes that have affected Erebonia. Although Cold Steel II extends a sepia-tinged summary of the main events on the first game, trying to recap every relationship, incident, and disagreement is near impossible. With so much of Cold Steel II’s journey grounded in the relationships and events of the first game, completion of Cold Steel is a near requisite. As a benefit for returning players, a bonus item is bestowed when a save game is found. So, if you’re thinking about picking this up without having finished the first game, know that the game’s conquests and poignant moments won’t be as moving unless you’re taken Cold Steel to completion.
One constant across the Kiseki games is the use of NPC dialog to assist with the world building. While some impatient players might find the game a bit too loquacious, there’s good reason for the enormous amount of dialog: it helps craft one of the richest realms in all of role-playing. Here, even tertiary characters are endowed with multiple things to say. Taken collectively, each bit of conversation helps to weave a lush social tapestry, that is the equivalent of a thick tome of written exposition.
While a number of publishers treat localization like an inconsequential task, it’s clear that XSEED feels different. I had the opportunity to speak to two members of the localization team who seemed remarkably committed to ensuring that the recent Kiseki games received the treatment they rightfully deserved, even sacrificing physical and mental wellness in the process. Thankfully, the efforts paid off, with Trails of Cold Steel adeptly balancing faithful translation with dialog that feels alive and helps to delineate each character just as much as the series’ visual design.
Fundamentally, Cold Steel II’s turn-based battles play out much like the first game, as a quartet of friendlies take on groups of foes via a combat system that’s nimble and offers enough nuance to maintain player interest. At the heart of the system is the game’s interpretation of Shin Megami Tensei’s social linking, permitting protagonists to intensify their level of comradery. The more time you invest in interpersonal bonds, the more battle options you’ll earn, bestowing a pleasing sense of progression extending everything from linked attacks to a free strike by a comrade when weapon affinity matches enemy weakness. But this time out, a few additions help to add even more variety when fighting.
While the Final Fantasy 7-esque Quartz system remains relatively unchanged, the integration of Lost Arts encourages parties to defeat some of the noncompulsory foes scattered around the game world. By slaying one of these foes, players can come into possession of a gem which allows for a devastating, potentially momentum-reversing actions that can be used once per battle. Gradually, battle activity fills Cold Steel II’s new Overdrive gauge is another welcome assist, allowing for a trio of overwhelming critical strikes from linked members without any worry of casting time.
Whereas Cold Steel teased taking the helm of Divine Knight Valimar, but now players will spend an increasing amount of time piloting the machine. Regrettably, the new battle system is a bit simplistic, with players targeting either the head, arms, or torso of enemies- with the resilience of each area revealed by a star-ranking system. The one upside is Cold Stee 2l’s allowance of secondaries, who can support Rean and Valimar with character specific strikes known as EX Arts that are capable of inducing status effects or even healing the Ashen Knight.
The original Trails of Cold Steel exhibited a few performance issues on the Vita, PlayStation 3, which were lessened, but not completely excised for the PC port. Fundamentally, the sequel extends flawless performance, with lightning-quick load times, and an unwavering sixty-frame per-second framerate on both GTX 1050ti and 1060-based rigs. Booting up the game gives players to a launcher, which reveals what each graphical option offers through a selection of screenshots.
Unquestionably, the ability the jump right back into the game without having to navigate through a succession of menus is a feature that should offered by more games. Here, Cold Steel 2 permits players to instantly resume the action, picking things up from the last save point in a fraction of a second. Another addition that demonstrates XSEED’s dedication to the franchise is the inclusion of additional voice-overs, which help to remedy the inconsistency between spoken and unvoiced dialog. The only remaining issue is the lack of the Japanese voice acting, while the English dubbing in competent, purists will dislike being able to play Cold Steel II in its original language.
But this minor quibble aside, The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel II is easily one of the best role-playing experiences released of the year. Largely overcoming the obstacles that confront games situated in the middle of series, developer Nihon Falcom understands what made the first entry successful and builds on those foundations for the follow-up. Fans who lament about the genre’s golden age should not miss this oft-poignant, perpetually pleasing series.
Trails of Cold Steel II was played on the PC
with review code provided by the publisher.
Platform: PC, previously on PlayStation 3, PS Vita
Developer: Nihon Falcom
Publisher: XSEED Games
Release date: February 14th, 2018
Price: $39.99 via Steam, 10% launch discount
Review Overview
Gameplay - 90%
Story - 90%
Aesthetics - 85%
Content - 90%
Accessibility - 85%
Innovation - 85%
88%
EXCELLENT
If you’re a JRPG aficionado, The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel II is a requisite purchase, with exposition and gameplay that are at the head of the class. Just make sure, you finish the original Cold Steel before heading into the sequel. Not only are the kinships you cultivated built on and there’s a few bonuses for a save file, but most importantly, this game’s exposition builds on the relationship and character traits of it’s predecessor. It’s especially rewarding if you play the series in the order intended.
I’m going to wait until I finish CS1 but bought this within an hour of release on Steam (that 10% discount!)
Agreed, I love the LoH games. They deserve to be as big as Persona.
PC games is not getting about half of my money. If you told me this would happen 2 years ago, I would have called you crazy.
I like my series all on the same console. Its a shame the 3rd game is only for PS4.
Wait, it’s not coming to PC? You’ll be able to get the trilogy on Steam or GOG!
Cold Steel III doesn’t even have a localization announcement yet. Meanwhile, Falcom’s porting the first two games to PS4, so we could eventually have all four games (Sen no Kiseki IV is coming this year) on both PC and PS4.
Robert you should host a giveaway.
I agree. I’d love to win the game. I already have the PS3 version.
Great review. Falcom makes some of the best jrpgs. I’d love to collect them all.
LOL @ using middle child syndrome to talk about this game. That’s a stretch right there.
I’m seeing a lot of DLC for the game. Is it all cosmetic or does anything expand the main game?