Castlevania Dungeon Forums
The Castlevania Dungeon Forums => General Castlevania Discussion => Topic started by: Geshmaal on December 19, 2007, 11:16:09 AM
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I'm 15, and although I've not completed any of the Castlevania titles (well, ALMOST done DoS), I've fallen in love with the gameplay style of the series. I've played Dracula's Curse, Super Castlevania 4 and Bloodlines from the original style, and I've had a little go of Circle of the moon and Harmony of Dissonance with the newer style, but not gotten very far. Could anyone reccomend me a good place to start when I've finished DoS? I've asked for Dracula X Chronicles for Christmas. Also, is there anyone else my age who would much rather play a side scroller to some new fps? First post, be nice! :)
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Dracula X Chronicles will be your best bet, since it includes Symphony of the Night and Rondo of Blood. Also, you should look for Aria of Sorrow, the prequel to DoS.
I prefer side scrolling to fps anyday :)
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In Reply To #1
Wel, I'm 13, not 15, but yes, I prefer Castlevania to any FPS there is. And I have finished a lot of Castlevania's. I reccomend the GBA games, AoS is where I started. If you have a PS2, Lament of Innocence and Curse of Darkness are great. Dracula X Chronicles is also a good idea, I'm also getting that for Christmas (I'm so excited!!). So yeah, those that I mentioned are great.
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I'm 19 now but I've been in love with Castlevania and Action/Adventure/RPG games for as long as I can remember. When I was a kid I'd play anything but for the past 9 years or so I've focused on action, adventure, and RPG games. Mainly Zelda, Castlevania, Metroid, and any good RPG like Oblivion.
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Ok, got Aria of Sorrow on my PSP (Emulator), anyone reccomend a classic Castlevania game with a friendly difficulty curve?
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In Reply To #5
Castlevania 3: Dracula's Curse
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Since he said, "original style," when he said Curse of Dracula, I believe he meant Dracula's Curse.
For one you haven't played that isn't Rondo of Blood, you may want to look into picking up the original Castlevania for Gameboy Advance. Most of those older games will be quite challenging, so it isn't easy to pick out one that is especially easy. But, Rondo and Super CV 4 are probably the most flexible as far as controls.
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Ok, got Aria of Sorrow on my PSP (Emulator), anyone reccomend a classic Castlevania game with a friendly difficulty curve?
simon's quest and Super Castlevania 4.
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In Reply To #1
Im 18 and while the games aren't my favorite style (Tactical RPGs [Vandal Hearts II is the greatest game ever] are more my style.)I like to take it easy and play them. Plus it is fun to show off your whip skills. I recommend beating Super Castlevania IV next. It rules.
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Any young one who enjoys classic Castlevania gameplay is broadminded, IMO.
Not unlike a 21-yr.old troll somewhere... ::)
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In Reply To #10
Trolls are such graphix wh0r3s. Sittin in their caves guard'n their elvish treasure and playin Halo 3 while drinking mountain dew. For Middle EaeARtHE!
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For Middle EaeARtHE!
Wow that misspelling is so full of win! haha
Anyways, Clara is like my equivalently gaming twin sister regarding this... and though I haven't been playing Oblivion as much, I've gone back to Diablo 2.
I'm currently making an crushing blow smiter for uber killing. ;D
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Since he said, "original style," when he said Curse of Dracula, I believe he meant Dracula's Curse.
Yeah, sorry about that, I had Curse of Darkness on my mind >_>
Ok, so I'll have a go at completing Super Castlevania IV! On stage 6 of it, where I seem to be killed by some form of light (probably something lost in emulation), but I'll persevere! I like the 8 directional attacks and whip swinging of Super Castlevania IV in particular, but I've heard they're pretty unique features.
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In Reply To #13
You will not see multidirectional swinging like that in any other game. The closest ones are Bloodlines, Chronicles, and some whips in Portrait of Ruin (in Bloodlines you will not get whip brandishing, and in Chronicles/X68000 you will not get the upper three directions OR the whip brandish).
The light that is killing you is a Flash Ectoplasm. They're wobbly multi-colored translucent blobs that bounce around the screen diagonally. Usually they don't show up at all on emulators or they show up as a glitch effect.
You can also try and find Castlevania Chronicles for Playstation (1). It's a faithful remake of an old PC rendition of Castlevania, but with a more updated set of controls. You still play as Simon Belmont and you play through many of the 'classic' Castlevania stages, using controls similar to those of SuperCV4.
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I'm 19 years old. I got a taste of CV2 when I was a kid, but didn't get back into the series until I turned 14 and bought Harmony of Dissonance. Lest to say, I now own about 90% of the CastleVania series released in America.
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You will not see multidirectional swinging like that in any other game.
Alucard in sotn and dos could slash his sword downwards which was basically the same as multidirectional whip swing. Except he could do that on the ground too. They copied that into por. :P
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he probably means all the eight rdirections.
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Yeah but alucard's was the same as (well ok better than) por. In por you could only whip diagonally down and only in air. Alucard could do that in sotn too except he could also do it while crouching.
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Well, I tried turning the quality of my emulator up, and the ghosts became visible. I pressed on, but after defeating the final boss of stage 6 and selecting stage 7, my emulator crashed, taking out several other games with it *cries*
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use Snes9x it's the best supernes emulator and the ghost in SCIV show up. :)
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Yeah, I was running Snes9x TYL on my PSP, I just had the settings so the game would run faster, as the fps drops at full quality. Problem is, my game crashed when I completed stage 6, and I've done it again and encountered the same problem. I've made a seperate thread about getting a NES/SNES, so post in there if you can help me! :)
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Yeah, I was running Snes9x TYL on my PSP, I just had the settings so the game would run faster, as the fps drops at full quality. Problem is, my game crashed when I completed stage 6, and I've done it again and encountered the same problem. I've made a seperate thread about getting a NES/SNES, so post in there if you can help me! :)
were you using the latest version? I know some of the older versions used to crash but for the most part the newer ones are really solid. Just make sure if you decide to get a snes that you have a coaxle jack on your TV as some of the newer one's I've noticed do not. Or if you have a gc you can use the analog cables from that too. The weird looking plug thing at the end the end that plugs into the GC should plug in just fine in the back of the Snes as well. :)
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Or you could just use zsnes, which is superior to snes9x. For one, both castlevanias work perfectly in it. :P
http://zsnes.com/
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In Reply To #22
Yeah, I have a GC so that wouldn't be a problem. I also have a Wii, so Virtual Console versions of the games may be an option. However, I would most likely have to invest in a Classic controller, as the Gamecube controller is plain weird...
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Or you could just use zsnes, which is superior to snes9x. For one, both castlevanias work perfectly in it. :P
http://zsnes.com/
Is there a PSP version of zsnes? I'm using it on my PSP, as I struggle controlling SNES games on my keyboard. Also, would my SNES9x save files work with it?
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In Reply To #24
You can't go wrong with the classic controller. It's a little thicker than the SNES, but for my 10 years after SNES larger hands, that's not so much of a problem.