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The Thran: The Thran were an ancient civilization of master artificers who were destroyed by Yawgmoth and his Phyrexians (converted Thran following him) during the Thran-Phyrexian War about 5,000 years before the Brothers. They are only hinted at in the game, but J. Robert King's novel The Thran explores their culture in some depth.
Although he said Lost Ember becomes more enjoyable later on, Bailes compared it negatively to Journey and said that Lost Ember "takes way too long to get flowing properly". [6] Brett Posner-Ferdman, who reviewed the Nintendo Switch version for Nintendo Life, also criticized the game's performance. He rated it 4/10 stars and wrote that the game ...
Lufia, known as Estpolis Denki (エストポリス伝記, Esutoporisu Denki, officially translated "Biography of Estpolis" [1]) in Japan, was a series of role-playing video games developed by Neverland (aside from The Ruins of Lore, which was developed by Atelier Double).
There are eight games thus far in the series: the first two full games, the four "chapter" releases of the third game, the full fourth game, and the free prequel, Ahriman's Prophecy. All the games in the series were made with RPG Maker XP ; Amaranth Games was the first developer to popularize RPG Maker as a commercial tool in 2006.
Let's wait until the game is properly released and gets coverage in better sources. If these sources mention the lore of the game at release, it might make sense to dip into older primary sources to briefly explain how the lore has changed in development. Grayfell 21:50, 26 June 2024 (UTC) I concur with Grayfell on the lore - who cares?
The first game in the series, Ys I: Ancient Ys Vanished, was released on the NEC PC-8801 in 1987. [2] Ys games have since been ported and released on many other platforms. As of 2017, Ys had sold over 4.8 million copies worldwide.
Challenge of the Ancient Empires!, also known as Ancient Empires, is an educational computer game created by The Learning Company in 1990 for both MS-DOS and Macintosh. [2] It is designed to improve history, logic, and problem solving skills in children ages 7 to 10 [3] (or 10 and up, according to the box art seen to the right).
In the video game Fire Emblem Heroes, the two main warring kingdoms are Askr and Embla, which is where the Summoner, the player, finds themselves in, as the kingdom has been at war with the Emblian Empire when the game starts. It is later revealed both kingdoms are named after a pair of Ancient Dragons; with Askr being male and Embla female.