Panzer Dragoon Saga

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Panzer Dragoon Saga
The Panzer Dragoon Saga European cover art. The protagonist, Edge, stands before his dragon and another character, Azel.
European cover art
Developer(s)Team Andromeda
Publisher(s)Sega
Director(s)Yukio Futatsugi
Designer(s)Manabu Kusunoki
Artist(s)Katsumi Yokota
Composer(s)Saori Kobayashi
Mariko Nanba
SeriesPanzer Dragoon
Platform(s)Sega Saturn
Release
  • JP: 29 January 1998
  • EU: 17 April 1998
  • NA: 5 May 1998
Genre(s)Action-adventure, role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player

Panzer Dragoon Saga, known in Japan as Azel: Panzer Dragoon RPG,[a] is a 1998 role-playing video game (RPG) developed by Team Andromeda and published by Sega for the Sega Saturn. The third entry in the Panzer Dragoon series, it replaced the rail shooter gameplay of the previous games with RPG elements such as random encounters, semi-turn-based battles and free-roaming exploration. The player controls Edge, a young mercenary who rides a dragon and encounters a mysterious girl from a vanished civilization.

Sega felt an RPG was critical to compete against the PlayStation and Final Fantasy. Development began in early 1995 alongside Panzer Dragoon II Zwei (1996). The project was arduous and repeatedly delayed; incorporating the Panzer Dragoon shooting elements with full 3D computer graphics and voice acting, both unusual features in RPGs at the time, pushed the Saturn to its technical limits and strained team relations. Two staff members died during development, which the director, Yukio Futatsugi, attributed to stressful working conditions.

Panzer Dragoon Saga is one of the most acclaimed Saturn games and is often listed among the greatest video games, earning praise for its story, graphics, and combat. Sales were low, and only a few thousand copies were published in the west, where Sega had shifted focus to its Dreamcast console.

After the release, Sega disbanded Team Andromeda. Several staff members joined a new Sega studio, Smilebit, and developed a fourth Panzer Dragoon game, Panzer Dragoon Orta (2002), for the Xbox. Although Panzer Dragoon Saga became a cult classic, it has never been rereleased and English copies sell for hundreds of US dollars.

Gameplay[edit]

Unlike the other Panzer Dragoon games, which are rail shooters, Panzer Dragoon Saga is a role-playing video game (RPG).[1] The player controls Edge, a young mercenary who rides a flying dragon. Gameplay is divided into three modes: traversing large areas on the dragon, battling enemies, and exploring on foot.[2] On foot, Edge can talk to non-player characters (NPCs), upgrade his weapons, buy items such as potions,[3] and use a targeting reticle to interact with elements such as doors and locks. When the player explores on the dragon, this reticle is used to fire lasers to activate triggers or break objects.[4] In one sequence, Edge rides a hoverbike instead of the dragon.[5] The player travels through environments including canyons, deserts, forests, and subterranean ruins.[6] These are accessed from the map screen, and new areas are added as the game progresses.[2][3] Campsites serve as rest areas and save points.[3] The game features full voice acting[3] and numerous FMV cutscenes.[2]

Saga simplifies many RPG conventions. For example, it has few travel sequences and side quests, requires little management of inventories or skill trees and features only Edge and his dragon rather than a party of playable characters. It can be completed in under 20 hours, making it much shorter than most RPGs at the time.[7]

Battle system[edit]

A screenshot of Edge and his dragon battling a large creature
Edge and his dragon in combat, with the enemy's weak point exposed. Note the combat menu on the left, radar indicating safe and dangerous zones in the center, and the three action gauges, one depleted, in the bottom-right.

Panzer Dragoon Saga uses a random encounter system, in which battles are triggered at random intervals as the player rides the dragon.[1] Battles mix real-time and turn-based elements.[4][8] Three "action gauges" charge in real time; when a gauge fills, the player can perform an action, such as attacking or using items.[1][8] Waiting for multiple gauges to charge gives the enemy more opportunity to attack, but grants the player more options, such as making multiple moves in quick succession.[4][5] The speed at which the gauges charge is governed by the dragon's agility attribute. If this is higher than the enemy's agility, the player can act more frequently than the enemy, and vice versa.[1]

The player can circle the enemy by moving between quadrants[9] to expose weak points and escape dangerous positions.[1][10] A radar at the bottom of the screen indicates safe, neutral and dangerous areas, with the front and rear quadrants typically posing the most danger.[1] Changing position temporarily stops the gauges.[4] Enemies may also change position to force the dragon into vulnerable areas.[2] Weak points can sometimes be attacked only from dangerous areas, and enemy attack patterns may change mid-battle, forcing the player to adapt.[5]

The two primary attacks are the dragon's laser, which strikes multiple targets simultaneously, and Edge's gun, which focuses damage on a single target and is useful for striking weak points.[1] Edge's gun can be upgraded with power-ups including three-way fire and the "sniper" modification, which deals additional damage to weak points.[1] The dragon's "berserks", the equivalent of magic spells in other RPGs, can heal, boost the dragon's attributes, or inflict powerful attacks. Berserks require berserk points and sometimes multiple action gauges.[1][4][5] Certain enemy attacks change the dragon's status: "stun" prevents it from using its lasers or berserks; "stop" prevents it from changing position; "poison" slowly drains its health points; "pain" slowly drains its defense attribute; "slow" increases the gauge charge time; and "bind" prevents all but the first gauge from charging.[11]

Players can morph the dragon to change its attack, defense, agility and spiritual attributes. Boosting one attribute diminishes another; for example, boosting the attack attribute reduces the spiritual attribute, which increases the cost of berserks,[3] and boosting agility allows the player to move more quickly around enemies but lowers defense.[3] Certain berserks are available only in certain dragon configurations,[1][4] and the dragon learns some types of berserks more quickly in different forms.[11] After battle, the player earns a ranking based on their performance. Better rankings reward the player with more experience points and items.[11]

Plot[edit]

Edge, a mercenary hired by the Empire, guards an excavation site filled with artifacts from the Ancient Age, a vanished civilization. Fending off an ancient monster, he discovers a girl buried in a wall. The site is attacked by the mutinous Black Fleet, who seize the girl, kill Edge's companions and shoot Edge. Edge survives, escapes with the help of a mysterious flying dragon, and swears revenge on the Black Fleet leader, Craymen.

Edge rescues Gash, a member of the Seekers, a scavenger group. Gash directs him to a nomadic caravan, where he learns the location of the Black Fleet. Edge defeats the fleet on his dragon, but learns that Craymen has already reached the Tower, an ancient structure of tremendous power. He fends off an attack by the girl from the excavation site, who has sworn allegiance to Craymen and rides an enormous dragon called Atolm.

In the town of Zoah, Edge meets Paet, an engineer who offers information about the Tower in exchange for artifacts. Searching an ancient vessel for parts, Edge is captured and tortured by imperial soldiers but rescued by Gash. Paet reveals that the Tower can be reached via the ruins of Uru; there, Edge and the dragon are attacked again by the girl and Atolm. After the battle, Edge and the girl are separated from their dragons and fall into an ancient underground facility. They form a truce to escape. The girl explains that she is an ancient bio-engineered lifeform named Azel, created in the facility and designed to interface with ancient technology. After Edge's dragon rescues them, Azel warns Edge that she will kill him if he crosses Craymen's path again. She leaves on Atolm.

Craymen surprises Edge in Zoah and requests his help fighting the Empire. Paet tells Edge he can find the Tower by deactivating Mel-Kava, an ancient machine that obscures the Tower's location with fog. In exchange for destroying an imperial base, the Zoah leader gives Edge access to an ancient artifact that grants a vision of Mel-Kava's location. Edge and the dragon destroy Mel-Kava, clearing the fog, but are attacked again by Azel and Atolm. They shoot down Atolm and rescue Azel as she falls.

The Emperor's flagship, Grig Orig, destroys Zoah, but the Black Fleet intervenes before Edge and the dragon are killed. At the Tower, Craymen tells Edge that the Tower is one of several that manufacture monsters to combat humanity's destructive forces. He needs Azel to activate the Tower and destroy the Empire before they can use it for themselves. Imperials arrive and capture Edge and Craymen. After the Emperor forces Azel to activate the Tower, monsters emerge and kill Craymen, the Emperor and their men. Edge and Azel escape on Edge's dragon. At the Seeker stronghold, Gash explains that the Tower will destroy humanity if it is not deactivated. He believes Edge's dragon is the prophesied Divine Visitor who will be humanity's salvation. Edge and the dragon battle rampaging monsters and destroy the infested Grig Orig.

Edge rescues Azel from monsters in the Uru facility, where she has returned to contemplate her purpose. They infiltrate the Tower, and Azel prepares to transfer Edge and the dragon into Sestren, the AI network that controls the towers. She confesses her love for Edge and he promises to return. Inside Sestren, Edge and the dragon defeat the network's "anti-dragon" programs. The dragon reveals that it is not the Divine Visitor but the Heresy Program, a rogue Sestren AI; the real Divine Visitor is "the one from the outside world" who has guided Edge, and must now destroy Sestren to free humanity from the Ancient Age. Edge and the dragon vanish. Gash awaits Edge in a desert. Azel, searching for Edge, asks directions across treacherous land.

Development[edit]

The Sega Saturn console
Panzer Dragoon Saga was one of the last games Sega released for the Saturn.

In March 1995, following completion of the original Panzer Dragoon, the producer, Yoji Ishiji, suggested making an RPG to explore the Panzer Dragoon world, as this had been praised in reviews.[7] Sega's president instructed the team to create an RPG to outsell Final Fantasy and help the Saturn compete with PlayStation.[12] Sega's Team Andromeda studio split into two teams: one worked on Saga while the other developed a shooter sequel, Panzer Dragoon II Zwei.[13] Saga had a staff of about 40, twice that of Zwei. Both teams used the Zwei engine and the 3D modeling software Softimage.[4]

The director, Yukio Futatsugi, said that Saga was the most difficult Panzer Dragoon game to develop, as many of its features, such as fully 3D environments, were unusual for RPGs at the time.[4] He said that every element was made "from whole cloth".[7] The engine had to support free exploration, battle sequences and real-time morphing and shading, pushing the Saturn to its limits.[4] Futatsugi said it would have been impossible to develop on the PlayStation, as he felt Saturn's "cloudier" palette gives the Panzer Dragoon series its atmosphere.[5] The team used no graphics libraries and programmed everything from scratch.[12]

Battle design[edit]

Akihiko Mukaiyama, who had worked on RPG series including Sakura Wars, was brought in to design the battle system, replacing the Zwei producer Tomohiro Kondo.[12] Mukaiyama expected his job to be simple, but found problems with Kondo's prototype: there was no strategic element, as the player had no reason to change positions.[12] Some staff felt they should create a traditional RPG battle system in which players select commands from a menu, while others wanted to focus on shooting, similar to earlier Panzer Dragoon games.[12] Mukaiyama compromised, allowing players to select commands from a menu or trigger them with button shortcuts.[12]

The battle system went through several iterations as the team struggled to combine the shooter and RPG genres.[12] The positioning system developed from an initial concept of fighting enemies for space;[4] this system was initially free-roaming, but too slow.[12] Mukaiyama simplified it by having the player move between quadrants around the enemy, which better simulated flying and allowed the artists to create dramatic camera movements.[12] The gauge system added further strategy, giving more options to the player.[12]

The dragon's morphing ability was added to compensate for the lack of a large cast of playable characters with different skills common in other JRPGs.[4] The team estimated that having the dragon morph in real time would be too difficult to implement, but a programmer surprised them with a working prototype.[13]

Reworking the series' shooting gameplay into an RPG took about a year.[14] Once the team had settled on the core action of locking on to targets, such as enemies and NPCs, the rest of the design followed.[14] After the battle system was finalized, development proceeded smoothly and some staff were moved to help complete Zwei.[4]

Story[edit]

Rather than create a "save-the-world" story with a large cast, Futatsugi concentrated on a small number of characters who the player would be "really close to", which he felt would make the story meaningful.[5] Although Edge is not a silent protagonist, Futatsugi minimized his dialogue outside cutscenes to focus on Azel's story, who he felt was the most important character.[5] Early versions had Edge as an imperial soldier who defects, and Craymen had an extensive backstory explaining his motivations for betraying the Empire. Both were cut for time.[13]

Saga features full voice acting. By contrast, the Final Fantasy series did not feature voice acting until Final Fantasy X, released three years later.[7] Sega estimated that the script amounted to more than 1,500 pages of Japanese text.[15][16] Like the other Panzer Dragoon games, Saga features a fictional language, Panzerese, which combines elements of Ancient Greek, Latin and Russian. Saga only features Panzerese in the introduction and end sequences, with the rest of the dialogue in Japanese.[9] In the English-language versions, the Japanese voice acting was subtitled rather than dubbed.[2]

The localizers were given incomplete translations and little supervision, and so inserted their own story interpretations, embellishing details and creating names for monsters.[7] One of the localizers, Chris Lucich, read several dark fantasy novels for inspiration, hoping to create a "dark post-apocalyptic feel”.[7] The biggest change was in the depiction of the relationship between Edge and Azel.[7] According to Futatsugi, their romance is obvious from a Japanese perspective, but would have been lost on a Western audience, as emotions are expressed more directly in English.[12] Lucich felt that Saga featured one of the first meaningful love stories in a video game.[7]

The team wanted to keep some elements open to interpretation[12] and hoped to "leave space for players' imaginations" by not revealing everything about the world.[13] In Kusunoki's interpretation, Edge dies at the beginning of the story when he is shot, and is brought back to life temporarily by the player; when the game ends, Edge dies again.[12]

Art[edit]

The art director, Manabu Kusunoki, had been the main character and art designer for the previous Panzer Dragoon games. For Saga, he brought in several new artists: Katsumi Yokota created the character and cover art, and Satoshi Sakai and Ryuta Ueda designed the dragons.[12] They resisted creating "spiky-haired" characters similar to those of Final Fantasy VII or Resident Evil, which were popular at the time, and competed to create unique designs.[12] They credited the animes Nausicaä and Neon Genesis Evangelion, the Star Wars films and the comic artist Jean Giraud as influences.[12] The dragon's unconventional design came partly from the need to morph smoothly between different models.[12]

Azel underwent the most revisions. The team did not want her to be a typical energetic anime-style heroine, and instead tried to make her simultaneously appealing and frightening, emphasizing her human and non-human traits.[13] Yokota said: "She couldn't just be cute; there had to be something edgy about her. I struggled with questions like, what does it mean to be cute? What does it mean to be human?"[12] He spent months refining Kusunoki's design, creating dozens of concepts.[12] In one design, Azel had a hole in her torso.[13] Her oversized jacket, belonging to her master, Craymen, was inspired by British mod fashion, which Yokota had seen in the 1979 film Quadrophenia. The team felt the jacket conveyed her identity and allegiance to Craymen and symbolized his protection.[12]

Soundtrack[edit]

The Panzer Dragoon Saga soundtrack was composed by Saori Kobayashi and Mariko Nanba and arranged by Hayato Matsuo. It includes South American, African, Celtic, classical and new age influences.[17] The Verge described it as blend of traditional European and Middle Eastern folk styles with science fiction-like synthesizer sounds.[18]

Rather than using prerecorded music, the soundtrack is mostly generated via pulse-code modulation by the Saturn's hardware, as with Zwei.[4] Although the hardware imposed limitations on the compositions, such as reducing the number of possible loops, Kobayashi felt this helped convey the story's desolate world.[7] The orchestrated ending theme, "Sona Mi Areru Ec Sancitu", features lyrics in Panzerese.[17] Futatsugi gave Kobayashi tribal music as inspiration, and instructed her not to give it a sense of closure, "leaving things open-ended and with the player wondering what happened".[12]

A soundtrack album was released by Marvelous Entertainment in February 1998.[17] In January 2018, an anniversary edition, Resurrection: Panzer Dragoon Saga, was released by Brave Wave Productions on CD, vinyl and download formats.[19] It features rearranged and rerecorded versions of the original soundtrack. As the original sequencer data no longer exists, Kobayashi recreated the music.[18]

Team[edit]

Director Yukio Futatsugi

In comparison to the small, cohesive teams that had created Panzer Dragoon and Zwei, the Saga team was large, and many staff did not know each other. Yokota described the team as "avant-garde and anti-establishment".[12] Kusunoki recalled "endless disputes", particularly between experienced Panzer Dragoon developers and those new to the series who wanted to explore new ideas. The project was delayed several times, creating the impression that it was struggling, and went through several directors.[12]

Mukaiyama found that whereas game development is usually driven by designers, the Saga programmers and artists had their own opinions. The programmers wanted to build on the technically sophisticated shooting of Zwei, whereas the artists wanted to explore the potential of 3D to showcase their characters. He said: "Their visions for the game would collide ... It was a constant battle ... I didn't think there could possibly be a solution to satisfy both parties. It took about a year, and a lot of mistakes, to find a solution."[12]

The development strained the staff. The Ringer characterized Saga as "a game about a world in ruins, produced by a disintegrating development team haunted by heartbreak at a company in decline".[7] Sega lacked experience managing large teams; it was the largest team Futatsugi had managed,[12] and he recalled pressure to "domineer" over the staff.[7] Sega's expectations for Saga were high and the team faced intense pressure.[20] At the height of production, staff slept in the office or caught early-morning trains home to nap, and relieved stress by playing fighting games on a Neo Geo arcade cabinet.[7]

Two staff members died during development: one from a motorcycle accident, which Futatsugi attributed to stress, and another from suicide. Futatsugi said it was the most difficult project he had ever worked on, and that "all we could do was carry on and finish the game – it was out of my hands".[20] He was close to the staff member who died from suicide, and was affected by the loss for a long time.[7] Mukaiyama became depressed, and later said the project was hardest experience of his life.[12] Nonetheless, Futatsugi felt it had benefited from having "someone who plays the bad guy role, someone who acts a little selfish, acts a little forceful to the team to achieve specific goals ... Having team members that will support that kind of bad cop is necessary, and if they don't exist then you can't get those kind of results."[5]

Release[edit]

Panzer Dragoon Saga was released in Japan in January 1998 as Azel: Panzer Dragoon RPG.[21] European and North American releases followed on 17 April and 5 May,[22][23] making Saga one of the last Saturn games published by Sega outside Japan.[9] It spans four CDs.[9] In the UK, the first disc was released as a demo with Sega Saturn Magazine; in 2010, GamesRadar+ named it one of the greatest demos of all time.[24]

Sega planned Saga to compete with the PlayStation RPG Final Fantasy VII, believing that having the best RPG would win the console war, and aimed to sell 1.5 million copies.[25] It was planned for release in the same year as Final Fantasy, but was delayed to 1998 to avoid competing with Grandia, another Saturn RPG.[25] Final Fantasy VII sold almost 10 million copies, but sales of Saga worldwide were low.[7][5]

In the west, where the Saturn had been a failure, Sega had shifted focus to its next console, the Dreamcast, and retailers were reluctant to stock Saturn games.[7] One of the Saga localizers, Chris Lucich, said it was a "strange transitional period" for Sega of America, which had shrunk from more than 2,000 employees to 200.[7] Sega initially produced only 20,000 North American copies of Saga. After these sold out in two days, a few thousand more were produced. In Europe, only around 1,000 copies were made.[7]

As Saga received almost no marketing in the west beyond limited print advertisements, the localizers sent screenshots to bloggers, hoping to generate word-of-mouth interest.[7] Sega allotted around only ten copies to the press and focused on hardcore game media, feeling other outlets would not be interested.[12] As no mainstream outlets had Saturn consoles, Sega had to provide them and then retrieve them to give to other outlets.[12] IGN's Levi Buchanan characterized the release as an example of the Saturn's "ignominious send-off" in the west, writing: "Sunset Saturn games like Panzer Dragoon Saga and Burning Rangers demanded far better launches. The way these games were slipped into retail with zero fanfare and low circulation was insulting to both hardworking developers and Sega fans."[26]

Mukaiyama said Sega was confused by the low sales.[25] At the request of the producer Yu Suzuki, who was developing the Dreamcast RPG Shenmue (1999), Sega held a meeting with the developers to discuss the failure.[25] Yokota felt Saga would have sold poorly in any situation, as the team were not interested in creating a mainstream product.[12] The localizer Matt Underwood speculated that Saga's post-apocalyptic setting, the "polar opposite" of Final Fantasy, had been off-putting to players.[7] The Andromeda artist Katsumi Yokota further attributed the low sales to the creative spirit of the team, who were not interested in creating a mainstream product.

Reception[edit]

The review aggregator website GameRankings lists Panzer Dragoon Saga as the Saturn game with the highest aggregate score, at 92%.[27] In 2007, Game Informer wrote that "critically, the game was a smash hit, lauded as one of the year's best, and generally considered the Saturn's finest title".[33]

The battle system received particular praise. Electronic Gaming Monthly wrote that whereas other RPGs had players methodically selecting menu options, Panzer Dragoon Saga's system forced them to account for time expenditures and positioning, producing "much more exciting" battles.[28] Next Generation said this built upon Squaresoft's Active Time Battle system and more closely simulated tactical combat by having reaction times and firing arcs play a role.[30] GameSpot described the system as a "revelation" with more strategy and challenge than traditional turn-based systems, and menus that become more intuitive with each encounter.[3] Edge praised the range and design of enemies as "consistently superb",[2] and Sega Saturn Magazine praised the depth and quantity of boss encounters.[1]

The graphics were also acclaimed. Though GameSpot noted occasional slowdown and "rough" textures, he felt the use of techniques such as gouraud shading, transparency and light sourcing created a "graphic level of excellence on a par with anything available on a home console". The review praised the "fluid easy grace" of the art direction, and the environment design, whose "every exotic location retains a place in your memory".[3] GamePro wrote: "Everything has that Saturn pixelated-edge look, but the scale of the beasts and environments is impressive and often overwhelming."[34] Computer and Video Games and Sega Saturn Magazine found that Team Andromeda had created visual effects that matched other home consoles.[1][11] Next Generation described "some of the most beautiful locations ever seen in an RPG ... It's almost unbelievable that they could come from Saturn."[35] Edge praised the extensive FMV cutscenes, whose "cinematic quality ... shames the work of almost every other developer" and created an "RPG of true creative integrity".[2]

GameSpot likened the sound and music to the quality of Hollywood productions.[3] Though Edge identified the subtitles as a cost-saving measure, it wrote that this was "infinitely preferable to the alternative of B-list actors reciting words they have little feeling for" and that it kept the story lucid and articulate.[2] Electronic Gaming Monthly felt the lack of English voices enhanced the sense of a different world.[28] GamePro felt it insulted US audiences and made the game feel unfinished, but wrote that it was "an aural delight otherwise".[34]

Several critics considered Panzer Dragoon Saga superior to Final Fantasy VII.[28][3][30] Next Generation described it as "a game so mature beyond the current scene that other developers have barely begun to explore its conventions".[30] Computer and Video Games wrote that if it were released on PlayStation it would "fly off the shelves".[11] Edge wrote: "It's a tragedy that the Saturn's standing will ensure Team Andromeda's adventure, with a radically different approach to FFVII, will enjoy a fraction of its rival's success."[2] GameSpot concluded: "Saga, in its own way, is so much more than Square's ultimate RPG. It is a worthy successor to a series that with each installment has grown in stature and scope. It is flawlessly executed, limited only by the hardware (and barely that at all) and medium."[3]

Criticism focused on the short length.[1][3][28][30][35] Sega Saturn Magazine felt Saga was too easy, especially the puzzles, but that achieving "Excellent" ranks in combat provided a good challenge.[1] Computer and Video Games noted that, like other Panzer Dragoon games, Saga rewarded players for full completion, with "astounding" bonuses.[11]

Many publications praised Panzer Dragoon Saga as one of the best RPGs of the year and one of the best on Saturn. GameSpot concluded that it was possibly the year's best RPG,[3] and Game Informer called it "easily" the best Saturn RPG.[29] The Electronic Gaming Monthly reviewers unanimously commended it as one of the best RPGs of all time and awarded it a "Editor's Choice Gold Award",[28] but awarded "Game of the Month" to PlayStation game Tekken 3.[36] Sega Saturn Magazine described Panzer Dragoon Saga as "a monumental effort, a work of art, and quite clearly a labour of love", and the best Saturn adventure.[1] GamePro said it solidified Panzer Dragoon as the Saturn's "coolest franchise" and was a satisfying completion of the series.[34] At the 2nd Annual Interactive Achievement Awards, Panzer Dragoon Saga was nominated for "Console Role-Playing Game of the Year" and "Console Game of the Year".[37]

Retrospective[edit]

Retrospective reviews have been positive. In 2007, Game Informer called Panzer Dragoon Saga one of the greatest games ever made, and praised the use of dramatic camera angles and animations to make the battles "very cinematic even by modern standards".[33] In a 2007 article, 1UP rated it 9/10, describing it as "the greatest RPG you've never played" and one of the "most unique" RPGs, and praised the leap from shooter to RPG.[5] Retro Gamer praised the fusion of action and RPG elements.[38]

In 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die (2013), Jason Brookes wrote that only the cutscenes had aged poorly and that "many aspects of the game impress above and beyond even many of the RPGs produced nowadays".[6] He, 1UP and Retro Gamer all praised the story's restraint and lack of cliché.[5][38][6] In a 2018 article for The Ringer, Ben Lindburgh praised the complexity of the characters, saying none were "truly heroic".[7] He drew parallels between the implementation of Edge's dragon as an "intimate computer companion" and the later games of Fumito Ueda (Ico, Shadow of the Colossus and The Last Guardian).[7] John Szczepaniak, the author of The Untold History of Japanese Game Developers, wrote that no game story had impressed him more and that the primitive graphics assisted the sense of an ancient, alien world.[7]

A 2008 Gamasutra article by Kurt Kalata was more critical. Kalata found that while the visual design was "still lovely", the graphics showed the Saturn's 3D limitations, with low-resolution textures, "boxy" character models, frequent slowdown and compressed video. Kalata wrote that the FMV cutscenes, while well directed, were inferior to Final Fantasy and illustrated the Saturn's shortcomings compared to PlayStation. He also agreed with complaints that the game was too short and lacked difficulty. Nonetheless, Kalata concluded that Saga was "still thoroughly entrancing" and that its battle system made it "completely worth it".[9]

Panzer Dragoon Saga was named one of the best games of all time by Computer and Video Games in 2000, Electronic Gaming Monthly in 2001 and 2006, IGN readers in 2005,[39] IGN in 2007[40] and G4 in 2012.[41] 1UP placed it #1 in its 2005 list of cult classic games,[42] and Game Informer ranked it #1 in its 2006 list of the "top 10 rare RPGs you need".[43] In 2008, IGN named it the greatest Saturn game, and wrote: "Panzer Dragoon Saga was the swan song to end all swan songs ... This dark, solemn game [is] wholly unique. It is the gem of the generation."[44] The following year, in its list of the "Greatest Gameplay of All Time", IGN named Saga the "best game no one played".[21] In 2017, Jeff Grubb of VentureBeat said Saga was arguably the best Sega game and expressed hope for a rerelease.[45] In 2023, Cultured Vultures named Panzer Dragoon Saga the best Saturn game.[46]

Legacy[edit]

Sega disbanded Team Andromeda after Saga's completion and reassigned some staff to Smilebit, which developed the final Panzer Dragoon game, Orta (2002), for the Xbox.[47] Meanwhile, Ueda worked on Jet Set Radio (2000), Sakai worked on Phantasy Star Online (2000) and Yokota worked on Rez (2001), all for Dreamcast.[12] Futatsugi left Sega and joined Konami.[20]

English-language copies of Panzer Dragoon Saga sold for hundreds of US dollars as of 2018, with factory-sealed copies selling for over a thousand. According to The Ringer, "Its scarcity has conferred a cult-classic status that's become part of its appeal ... To play it is to enter an exclusive, clued-in club."[7] Japanese copies are far cheaper, but have no English translation and cannot be played on Western Saturn consoles.[9]

Panzer Dragoon Saga has not been rereleased.[5] In 2009, the game-downloading service GameTap said it had non-exclusive rights to distribute it, but as Saturn emulation is difficult, there was not enough demand to make it a priority.[48] According to Futatsugi, Sega has lost the source code, making porting it difficult.[5] Given the opportunity to remake Saga, Futatsugi said he would make it less linear, with an open world, branching player choices and online communication.[7] In another interview, he said he would consider telling the story from Azel's perspective.[12]

Notes and references[edit]

  1. ^ Azeru –Pantsā Doragūn Arupījī– (Japanese: アゼル –パンツァードラグーン RPG–)
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Leadbetter, Rich (April 1998). "Panzer Dragoon Saga review". Sega Saturn Magazine (30). EMAP: 62–65.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Panzer Dragoon Saga review". Edge Online. Future plc. 25 March 1998. Archived from the original on 4 April 2013. Retrieved 29 November 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Mielke, James (20 May 1998). "Panzer Dragoon Saga review". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Torres, Ricardo (1 July 2005). "GameSpot presents: The history of Panzer Dragoon". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 22 September 2004. Retrieved 11 December 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Mielke, James (11 September 2007). "Panzer Dragoon Saga Sega Saturn retrospective". 1UP.com. Ziff Davis. Archived from the original on 23 November 2012. Retrieved 7 December 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ a b c Mott, Tony (2013). 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die. New York: Universe Publishing. pp. 361, 950. ISBN 978-0789320902.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Lindburgh, Ben (29 January 2018). "The ruinous road of gaming's missing masterpiece". The Ringer. Archived from the original on 2 February 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  8. ^ a b "Panzer Dragoon Saga: Sega's Answer to Final Fantasy VII". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 105. Ziff Davis. April 1998. p. 45.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Kalata, Kurt (16 April 2008). "The history of Panzer Dragoon". Gamasutra. Archived from the original on 11 November 2014. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  10. ^ "The RPG Revolution". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 106. Ziff Davis. May 1998. p. 90.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Key, Steve (April 1998). "Panzer Dragoon Saga". Computer and Video Games (97). Future Publishing: 62–65.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Mielke, James (30 April 2018). "Panzer Dragoon Saga: an oral history". Polygon. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Azel: Panzer Dragoon RPG Official Strategy Guide. Japan: SoftBank. 1998. ISBN 978-4797305579.
  14. ^ a b Sheffield, Brandon (19 December 2011). "From Panzer to Draco: Yukio Futatsugi Speaks". Gamasutra. UBM TechWeb. Archived from the original on 7 December 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  15. ^ "Dragoon returns!". Sega Saturn Magazine (22). EMAP: 7. August 1997.
  16. ^ "NG Alphas: Panzer Dragoon Saga". Next Generation. No. 35. Imagine Media. November 1997. p. 104.
  17. ^ a b c Rzeminski, Lucy; Walton, Jason. "RPGFan Music – Azel: Panzer Dragoon RPG". RPG Fan. Archived from the original on 7 December 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  18. ^ a b Webster, Andrew (24 January 2018). "After 20 years, Panzer Dragoon Saga's composer finally made the soundtrack she always wanted". The Verge. Vox Media. Archived from the original on 24 January 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  19. ^ Paquet, Ryan (14 December 2017). "Brave Wave to release Resurrection: Panzer Dragoon Saga 20th Anniversary Arrangement Soundtrack". Original Sound Version. Archived from the original on 4 January 2018. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
  20. ^ a b c Robson, Daniel (8 April 2013). "Flying through life: Meet the man behind Panzer Dragoon". Eurogamer. Gamer Network Ltd. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  21. ^ a b "The Greatest Gameplay of All-Time: Part 1". IGN. Ziff Davis. 9 April 2004. Archived from the original on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  22. ^ "Saturn's Last Line-Up". GameSpot. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  23. ^ "sega-europe.online". 2 December 1998. Archived from the original on 2 December 1998. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  24. ^ Towell, Justin (10 May 2010). "The top 7 ... best demos of all time". GamesRadar+. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  25. ^ a b c d Kim, Matt (3 October 2007). "New interview reveals the high expectations that doomed the classic RPG Panzer Dragoon Saga". USgamer. Gamer Network. Archived from the original on 15 February 2018. Retrieved 8 February 2018.
  26. ^ Buchanan, Levi (3 September 2008). "Burning Rangers retro review". IGN. Ziff Davis. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 18 November 2014.
  27. ^ a b c d "Panzer Dragoon Saga for Saturn". GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
  28. ^ a b c d e f "Review Crew: Panzer Dragoon Saga". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 107. Ziff Davis. June 1998. p. 118.
  29. ^ a b "Panzer Dragoon Saga". Game Informer. GameStop. May 1998. Archived from the original on 24 August 1999. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  30. ^ a b c d e "Finals". Next Generation. No. 41. Imagine Media. May 1998. p. 112.
  31. ^ かおり; LINNE; 馬波 (6 February 1998). "Sega Saturn Soft Review - AZEL –パンツァードラグーン RPG–". Sega Saturn Magazine (in Japanese). No. 1998/2/6. SoftBank. p. 186.
  32. ^ 野村; 児玉; 西村 (30 January 1998). "Now on Sale Saturn Soft Impression!! - AZEL –パンツァードラグーン RPG–". Sega Saturn Fan (in Japanese). No. 2. Tokuma Shoten Intermedia. p. 179.
  33. ^ a b "Panzer Dragoon Saga: the sad tale of the Saturn's last great game". Game Informer. No. 176. GameStop. December 2007. pp. 164–165.
  34. ^ a b c Boba Fatt (May 1998). "Panzer Dragoon Saga". GamePro. No. 116. IDG. p. 112.
  35. ^ a b "Panzer Dragoon Saga". Next Generation Online. Imagine Media. 14 May 1998. Archived from the original on 29 August 1999. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  36. ^ "Review Crew: Tekken 3". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 107. Ziff Davis. June 1998. p. 117.
  37. ^ "1999 2nd Annual Interactive Achievement Awards". Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  38. ^ a b Harrison, Phil (20 August 2008). "Panzer Dragoon Saga". Retro Gamer. Imagine Publishing. Archived from the original on 1 March 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  39. ^ "IGN and KFC Snacker present readers' top 99 games". IGN. Ziff Davis. Archived from the original on 29 April 2005. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  40. ^ "IGN top 100 games 2007". IGN. Ziff Davis. Archived from the original on 14 April 2012. Retrieved 24 November 2008.
  41. ^ "22: Panzer Dragoon Saga". G4. G4 Media. 2012. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
  42. ^ "Top 10 cult classics". 1UP.com. Ziff Davis. 22 June 2005. Archived from the original on 25 June 2015. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  43. ^ "The top ten rare RPGs you need". Game Informer. No. 158. GameStop. June 2006.
  44. ^ Buchanan, Levi (29 July 2008). "Top 10 Sega Saturn games". IGN. Ziff Davis. Archived from the original on 12 July 2017. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  45. ^ Grubb, Jeff (21 September 2017). "Sega should revive Panzer Dragoon Saga on PC next | VentureBeat". VentureBeat. Archived from the original on 7 December 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  46. ^ Ricard, Gabriel (3 February 2023). "15 Best Sega Saturn Games of All Time". Cultured Vultures. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  47. ^ Torres, Ricardo (1 July 2005). "GameSpot Presents: The History of Panzer Dragoon". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 22 September 2004. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  48. ^ Mitchell, Richard (14 May 2009). "GameTap: Emulation 'complexity' holding back Panzer Dragoon Saga". Engadget. Oath Inc. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 13 December 2015.