Ephemeral Fantasia Explained

Ephemeral Fantasia
Collapsible:yes
State:expanded
Developer:KCEJ East
Publisher:Konami
Platforms:PlayStation 2
Genre:Role-playing
Modes:Single-player

Ephemeral Fantasia, known in Japan as, is a 2000 role-playing video game developed by Konami Computer Entertainment Japan and published by Konami for the PlayStation 2. The game was released in Japan on August 10, 2000, in North America on July 9, 2001 and in Europe on September 7, 2001.

Gameplay

Ephemeral Fantasia features traditional role-playing video game turn-based battles, with a variety of playable characters and skills. Additionally, there is a guitar mini-game that can be played several times throughout the course of the story.

Plot

Ephemeral Fantasia is similar to in that the story transpires over a constantly looping period of five days. This is caused by a time loop created by the main antagonist, Xelpherpolis. In order for the time loop to be halted, Mouse must travel through the same five days multiple times.

This game follows Mouse, who has been summoned by a powerful figure on a remote island to compose a song. Xelpherpolis invites Mouse to play at his wedding, no doubt because of his fame as an excellent musician. Of course, Xelpherpolis doesn't expect him to solve the mystery of the island and free its inhabitants.

Development

Ephemeral Fantasia was originally to be released on the Sega Dreamcast.[1] [2] An interview with development team member Makoto "M2" Moribe of Famitsu revealed that additional content planned for the Dreamcast version was cut when the game was moved to PS2.

Reception

The game received "generally unfavorable reviews" according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. Francesca Reyes of NextGen said of the game, "Don't be fooled by the cute characters on the box promising console RPG goodness. You'll find none of that here. Keep moving."

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Perry, Douglas C. . September 22, 1999 . TGS 1999: Reiselied - First Details . . . December 8, 2018.
  2. Web site: Zdyrko, David . April 3, 2000 . TGS 2000: Reiselied Impressions . IGN . Ziff Davis . December 8, 2018.