Game Shin Megami Tensei: Imagine Online Review

Unlike most MMOs, MegaTen Online follows the story down to a T. The plot takes off between the events of Shin Megami Tensei I and II (for the SNES). For fans and new players, IMAGINE’s story acts independently from the SNES predecessors, so there’s no need for any background knowledge aside from the cutscenes the online game provides. You’ll find yourself in a post-apocalyptic world filled with demons and humans. Demon busters are recruited to restore order from the conflict from the remnants of the war between the two races.
The game relies heavily on the story, and character growth revolves around the story. MegaTen divides your adventure into acts and quests. Acts are the main storyline quests and divide the game like chapters to a book. These acts are divided into tasks that take players to every corner of the map and to different NPCs. The quests are more of a sidetrack for players and can be done at any time during the game. Acts and quests provide very generous rewards, even to partymates who share the effort of completing the task. Most of the sidequests are repeatable to keep players extra busy. Sadly, these quests are sparse and often take long to finish. Acts also usually have level requirements. Eventually, players will be forced to grind their way throughout the game due to such scarcity of to-do tasks.

The most important feature of the Shin Megami Tensei franchise is the use of demons in battle. Players can catch, collect, and train demons to aid them in battles. Very integral to the system is demon fusion (or akuma gattai in the original series). Players can combine 2-3 different demons to form stronger and more versatile demons. Demon AI is very impressive, able to act according to the conditions of the immediate surroundings and of the character’s status. Demons can heal, defend, or attack aggressively depending on the environment, AI setting or player commands. Players can also manually control their demon whenever they please, but this leaves the main character motionless and prone to danger. Nevertheless, the demon system proves to be an integral part of your online adventure in MegaTen.

Aesthetically, fans and newbies alike will feel right at home in MegaTen. The game shows their trademark art style (stern eyes, glass bead iris, and darkened lower lip) and bleak post-apocalyptic atmosphere. Other locations present highly-industrialized surroundings with visual flair, typical of the MegaTen series. Maps are impressively large but not seamless. Dungeons are instanced and are not fixed to just one map. These have several different map sets that are randomly generated for each access. Music doesn’t fail the game too. The tracks fit well with the atmosphere, and also immediately changes to the proprietary battle BGM whenever combat starts.

The Good: Demon system, open-ended skill and stat build, heavy story orientation
The Bad: heavy grind, difficult sidequests, console game look and feel
Sound: 7
Gameplay: 6
Story: 9
Final Score: 8/10