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Breath of Fire II (Super Nintendo) Review

USA Fri, 10 Aug 2007 by Damien McFerran

Breath of Fire II Screenshot

Featuring a wide range of characters and personalities and a vast, endless world to explore, Breath of Fire II is the sequel to the original smash-hit role-playing game.

Capcom’s Breath of Fire series isn’t really respected that much these days – the last instalment – the underrated Breath of Fire: Dragon Quarter for the PS2 - was a bit too different from previous games and didn’t really make the impact Capcom possibly hoped for.

Compare this to the fanfare that followed the release of the first BoF game all those years ago. Capcom’s first ‘serious’ RPG, the game was a massive success and paved the way for the release of the sequel, which amazingly improved on its predecessor in every way imaginable.

Breath of Fire II Screenshot

Playing BoF2 today is difficult, because we’ve been exposed to much better RPGs in the past decade or so. BoF2 is unshakeably old school. The battle system, and item system and the Western translation all hark back to a bygone era.

Graphically, everything is fine, but it must be noted that the visuals are nowhere near as impressive as fellow SNES classics such as Zelda: LttP or Secret of Mana. The music is also rather underwhelming.

The combat system is your standard turn-based affair, with the only unique twist being the ability to fuse your character with various shaman-types, thus granting your character additional powers during battle.

Where BoF2 really excels is the standard of the story. A very clever take on modern religion, the plot has plenty of twists and heart-wrenching moments (it never ceases to amaze me how attached you become to cartoon-like sprites with only a handful of animation frames).

Breath of Fire II Screenshot

The story is done a massive disservice by the aforementioned localization, which often borders on the laughable. Sadly this was par for the course back in the 16-bit era, with many quality RPGs being butchered by poor translations.

Conclusion

The Virtual Console is slowly getting more and more decent role-players and BoF2 represents another fantastic addition to current selection. It’s not quite what I’d call a ‘legendary’ RPG, but fans of the genre willing to look past the minor shortcomings are unlikely to be disappointed.

User Comments

Digiki

1. Digiki Canada 01 Mar 2009, 23:43 GMT

I agree with this score, but don't agree with this looking worse than ALttP or SoM, and I personally am a big fan of this games music.

Edit: What's up with the block size difference between NA and EU?

Bass X0

2. Bass X0 United Kingdom 11 Mar 2009, 16:34 GMT

I'd give it a 7. Its good but not very good. Its not that theres anything particularly wrong with it, I just didn't find it special enough or different enough from all the other RPGs on the SNES. An 8 suggests its almost a classic - its not. It is quite enjoyable while it lasts though but it just doesn't have anything that particularly makes it stand out amongst all the others. If we were rating games on the VC only compared to what else is on the VC then yeah, maybe it does deserve an 8. But I don't like to do that since we get new games weekly. I'd give the original a 6 overall though. That was too slow and got quite dull.

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