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IMDbPro

Ys: Book 1&2

  • Videospiel
  • 1990
  • E
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,4/10
112
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ys: Book 1&2 (1990)
ActionAdventureFantasy

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuYou play as Adol who goes on an adventure fighting monsters, later on, he climbs Darm Tower to fight Dark Fact. In the Sequel, Adol is sent to the floating island of YS to save the people fr... Alles lesenYou play as Adol who goes on an adventure fighting monsters, later on, he climbs Darm Tower to fight Dark Fact. In the Sequel, Adol is sent to the floating island of YS to save the people from the demons and monsters, and to fight Darm.You play as Adol who goes on an adventure fighting monsters, later on, he climbs Darm Tower to fight Dark Fact. In the Sequel, Adol is sent to the floating island of YS to save the people from the demons and monsters, and to fight Darm.

  • Regie
    • Masaya Hashimoto
  • Drehbuch
    • Tomoyoshi Miyazaki
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Alan Oppenheimer
    • Jim Cummings
    • Michael Bell
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,4/10
    112
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Masaya Hashimoto
    • Drehbuch
      • Tomoyoshi Miyazaki
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Alan Oppenheimer
      • Jim Cummings
      • Michael Bell
    • 8Benutzerrezensionen
    • 1Kritische Rezension
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos6

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    Topbesetzung22

    Ändern
    Alan Oppenheimer
    Alan Oppenheimer
    • Darm
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Jim Cummings
    Jim Cummings
    • Dalles
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    Michael Bell
    Michael Bell
    • Dark Fact
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    Shannon Beaty
    Shannon Beaty
    • Maria Messa
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    Stevie Louise Vallance
    Stevie Louise Vallance
    • Lair
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as Louise Vallance)
    • …
    Bruce Lanoil
    Bruce Lanoil
    • Luta Gemma
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    Thomas Haden Church
    Thomas Haden Church
    • Goban Toba
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as Thomas H. Church)
    Dan Gilvezan
    Dan Gilvezan
    • Keith Fact
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    David Henry Sterry
    David Henry Sterry
    • Dekka Dabbie
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as David Stary)
    Debi Derryberry
    Debi Derryberry
    • Feena
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    Mea Martineau
    • Lilia
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    Banjô Ginga
    • Darm
    • (Synchronisation)
    Daisuke Gôri
    • Goban Toba
    • (Synchronisation)
    Hideyuki Hori
    • Keith Fact
    • (Synchronisation)
    Michitaka Kobayashi
    • Luta Gemma
    • (Synchronisation)
    Katsuji Mori
    Katsuji Mori
    • Dark Fact
    • (Synchronisation)
    Mayumi Shô
    Mayumi Shô
    • Lair
    • (Synchronisation)
    Hiromi Tsuru
    Hiromi Tsuru
    • Lilia
    • (Synchronisation)
    • Regie
      • Masaya Hashimoto
    • Drehbuch
      • Tomoyoshi Miyazaki
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
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    Benutzerrezensionen8

    8,4112
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    brainwarp

    By far one of the best RPGs out there. Dragon Slayer, Alundra, and Vagrant Story.

    I loved Y's 1, 2, 3, 4 on the Turbo Duo (PC Engine in Japan) by NEC. Y's 4 was all Japanese though, so never completed it. Y's 1&2 were by far the best of the Y's series. 4 was more like 1&2, but all Japanese, so was hard to play and enjoy as much. I know there is a Y's for the PS2 now and I really want to try it.

    Dragon Slayer is also another awesome RPG on the Turbo Duo.

    Playstation 1's Alundra (not Aludra 2 though) and Vagrant Story are two more awesome RPGs.

    I have yet to find an RPG that I can say really stands out on the PS2. Final Fantasy lost me with FF7 and up. Though I mostly liked FF1-4 If anyone knows of any great RPGs for the PS2, I may check them out. But so far I haven't really enjoyed any of them. Hated "Kingdom hearts", ICO was too slow.

    Really, I think the only 3D RPG I have really liked so far is Vagrant Story on the PS1.
    eMTeePeeCestMe

    A precedent setting role playing game.

    "Ys Book I & II" in many ways is your standard RPG (Role-Playing Game) about a boy who would be hero (Adol), out to destroy the "great ancient evil" (Dark Fact) which has blighted his homeland for generations from atop Darm Tower. The story is as strait forward a cliché as it sounds and the graphics are standard late 80's simplicity, but as one of the earliest CD-ROM games it blazed some brilliant new trails in its use of fill in cinematic story telling and true voice narrations. It also shocks the first time player with the revelation that just when you think it's over, that's only "Book I". In a stylish revolution stolen by every "Zelda" game since, the first challenge (Book I) is followed immediately by a longer, harder challenge (Book II).
    10breathfire

    One of the, it not the, greatest RPG ever created

    Mere words cannot describe a game with such a great story. Tears of nostalgia come to my eyes, whenever I hear the opening song, or any song for that matter. It's unfortunate, that America has never really expierienced this game, because, the Turbo Grafx, although the BEST system of the 3 16-bitters, didn't generate enough popularity. But, this game, is worth buying a Turbo for it! There are ofcoarse loads of other great games, but, this is deffinitly one of the masterpieces! I highly recomend it.
    10doc_brown

    Perfection

    The first time I popped Ys Book I & II into my Turbo Duo, I knew I was in for the greatest videogame experience of my life.

    I had never played a CD-ROM game before, so I was completely amazed when I heard an actual narrator (Alan Oppenheimer) telling me the story of a hopeless world oppressed by evil forces. The complete awe I felt watching the introduction never once dimmed as I made my way through the adventure.

    The story may sound like countless others you've heard in you life, but Ys tells it with so much quality. A young man, Adol Christin, must gather the books of Ys in order to bring down the megalomaniac, Dark Fact (beautifully voiced by veteran cartoon man, Michael Bell). Once he recovers the books, Adol is then transported to the land of Ys where he must face the most powerful and frightening of foes - Boss Darm.

    Without giving the entire story away, I must say that Ys presents one of the most sweeping adventures of all time; this includes movies, books and radio. I was absolutely mesmerized as I made my way through this enormous quest, never once wanting to put the controller down. When I finally beat the game, I was left speechless. The ending was moving and uplifting all at once. The game beautifully wrapped everything the player experienced throughout the adventure into an unforgettable denouement.

    I can't begin to say how much this game moved me. It developed the characters into people you cared about, it swept you through a land filled with challenge and excitement, and at the end, it made you beg on your hands and knees for more. This is by far the greatest game I have ever played, and I can safely say that no game since has touched me the way this one has. The music and voice acting are second to none, and although the graphics appear dated, they still retain much of their charm to this day. If you love RPGs, videogames, or love epic tales, then by any means necessary, dig up a Turbo Grafx CD player and this disc. You will never look at videogames the same way again.
    10jpvarga5

    A trailblazer for a cinematic games to come

    Some of you may have played the original Ys on the Sega Master System, or Ys 3 on the Genesis, SNES, or The Ark of Napishtim on the PS2, PSP (technically the 6th in the series), but the best - and sadly underplayed - release in the West was Ys Book I & II on the first console to use a CD-ROM - the TurboGrafx-16/CD. Ys originally appeared as a 2 part/2 game story for Japanese PC back in the 80s. The game itself is actually a remake of those first two Ys games merged into one narrative (it works well, since the first game basically ends "to be continued") While at its heart, the game is basically a Zelda-style game, what set this particular version apart was its groundbreaking presentation.

    Strange as it sounds, what defines Ys more then anything is the music, but not because the rest of it isn't up to par - the music actually enhances the whole experience - it TELLS the game's story and gives the whole quest this evocative quality. Perhaps it was the shock of going from NES music to REAL music that made such an impression on me, but even many latter-day J-RPG soundtracks don't even compare (as good as the compositions in Final Fantasy VII are, for example, the sound quality still sounds like a goofy wavetable set for Sound Blaster 16 by comparison). The only music in Ys that could be called "ordinary" would be the town music. To fit both games on one CD-ROM, the designers opted to give the towns standard TG synth music. It actually works well, strangely, enough, since you feel safe when you are not being bombarded with violins and electric guitars. The original music was composed by Yuzo Koshiro, of Actraiser and Streets of Rage fame. His original compositions were re-arranged for this version, but you can still hear his style in the pieces. Ys music is so popular in Japan, that the amount of arranged soundtracks and OSTs for the games easily rivals Final Fantasy's catalog.

    On top of the epic music, you get a voice cast consisting of Alan Oppenheimer, Jim Cummings, and Michael Bell - all of whom have done voice acting for countless cartoons, video games, and movies (He-Man, Neverending Story, Lost Odyssey, you name it) - and even Thomas Haden Church (Sideways, Spider-Man 3). Story-wise, don't expect the bloated philosophical pondering of Xenogears, but it does go beyond the standard kill-the-evil-demon plot. You essentially play part hero/part archaeologist as you investigate the legends surrounding an Atlantis-esqe civilization known as Ys (pronounced "ease"). The "uncovering" part actually gives the game some of its mystique (captured greatly by the music as well) since you feel like you are doing much more then simply killing a bad guy.

    The only part of the game that might considered detracting to some is the combat system. It's real-time like Zelda, but what sets apart is its lack of an attack button. Basically, you equip a sword and you literally ram into the enemies. Depending on the your stats, equipment, and the angle of attack, you will either damage the enemy and send it reeling back or it will do the same to you. While I've noticed its been an initial turn-off to some gamers since we're all weened to strike our sword with an attack button, it actually feels very succinct and intuitive once you get used to it. The boss battles usually require trickier strategies and you'll eventually be introduced to magic attacks, but the combat system is rather unique. The actual in-game graphics stray somewhere between 8-bit and 16-bit. They're effective and do the job, but I get the impression the designers let the cut-scenes and music "tell the story". Its effective in that it you really don't "notice" the in-game graphics being rather mundane.

    To those who have never played Ys in 1990 and were to do so now, I imagine it may not instill the same amount of awe and wonder that it did for a 12 year old gamer just weened off of the NES. Even the series' contemporary remakes and sequels can only add so much more polish to a formula that looks pretty run-of-the-mill by today's standards. However, to those who download it, I think most can appreciate that it represented something unique back in 1990, at least. Today's games may have pushed cinematic quality and narration far beyond Ys, but when I experienced this game for the first time, it was a shocking revelation. It was a fortune-teller showing me that games would soon no longer consist of contrived settings and mindless hand-eye coordination tests. You could convey emotion and grandeur in a video game on a level every bit as good as cinema. To me, many aspects of modern games - certainly Japanese games - owe a debt paved by Ys on the Turbo. Seeing it re-emerge after so many years of obscurity has really helped me appreciate what it showed me all those years ago.

    (Small Note: One reviewer mentioned that "Book II" is actually a more challenging version of "Book I". This incorrect. II is a direct sequel to I.)

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    • Wissenswertes
      The Turbografx 16 version of Ys Book I & II with Anime cutscenes and voice acting has been released on Nintendo Wii Virtual Console in 2008 making it available for 10 years. However in 2018, The Wii shop channel has shutdown and this game is no longer available to buy on the Wii anymore. Now only the disc version for Turbografx 16 is available but it's the most expensive game ever. Another option is the Turbografx 16 mini console which came out in 2020 and it has the Ys: Book 1&2 game included as part of the 57 games lineup.
    • Zitate

      Narrator: [Opening lines with the screenshots of Ys] Ys, the ideal utopia. Once a country so peaceful and prosperous. A country where children was free as the wind. A country where harmony blew through the hearts of all men. Ys, a kingdom ruled by the wisdom and charity of its six powerful priests. An empire watched over and blessed by the enchanting aura of it's two beautiful Goddesses. Ys, the seemingly tranquil paradise, suddenly pulled from the height of its civilization, to the empty abyss of infinite isolation. How could such a land of promise simply vanish from the face of the planet? How could such prosperity be forgotten?

      Narrator: [Then the opening Title screen shows a picture of the Goddess holding an orb] The legend has been silenced for over 700 years. And now, the mystery unfolds.

      Narrator: In the beginning.

      [Then an opening scene introduces screenshot of characters]

    • Verbindungen
      Remake of Ys: The Vanished Omens (1987)

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      • Alfa System Co. Ltd.
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