Crimson Shroud review

Putting the bored in board game

GamesRadar+ Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Fanciful visuals and settings

  • +

    Great soundtrack

  • +

    Extensive loot system

Cons

  • -

    Tiresome and repetitive battles

  • -

    Lack of explanation and directions at critical parts

  • -

    Lack of animation and voice-overs

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Japanese director Yasumi Matsuno is best known for his work on big RPG titles like Vagrant Story and Final Fantasy Tactics, so when it was announced that he was working on his first new IP in years, gamers were understandably excited. And when it was revealed that the game would be designed around the concept of a traditional tabletop RPG, gamers were understandably intrigued. It’s quite disheartening, then, to find out that Crimson Shroud is actually one of Matsuno’s weaker titles. Frankly, it’s quite boring.

Traditional tabletop RPGs involve players acting out roles and sitting around a table rolling dice to decide their fate. It’s an interactive social experience, but in video game form, it simply becomes a solitary adventure. Crimson Shroud has no voice-overs, so you’re the one reading through the text-heavy cutscenes, and you’re the one rolling dice to decide how successful certain actions will be. It's one thing for an RPG to emulate the feel of a board game, but it’s another for it to actually succeed in translating that feeling into a video game. The game is not a graceful marriage, and its tabletop-inspired motifs actually hurt it from being a fun roleplaying game.

Crimson Shroud is clearly Matsuno’s labor of love, but it’s a shame so many of its features failed in execution and proved more annoying in practice. Its redeeming qualities lie in its presentation, but that barely makes coping with repetitive and tiresome battles any better. If you want to experience something close to what Crimson Shroud should have been, you’re better off playing Vagrant Story and a tabletop RPG at the same time. It’s bound to be far more exciting.

More info

GenreRole Playing
DescriptionCrimson Shroud is set 1,000 years in the past in a world without magic in which the story details how magic became commonplace in its world.
Platform"3DS"
US censor rating"Teen"
UK censor rating""
Alternative names"Guild01"
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)
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