Testseek.com have collected 12 expert reviews of the Atelier Totori: The Adventurer of Arland and the average rating is 78%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Atelier Totori: The Adventurer of Arland.
October 2011
(78%)
12 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: PlayStation 3It's no secret that Japanese RPGs tend to tread a lot of familiar ground. There's nothing inherently wrong with that, but it makes those that tell more unique stories all the more memorable, notwithstanding their flaws. Atelier Totori: Adv...
Abstract: Growing up as a social outcast in the god-forsaken 90s, I found myself quickly drawn into the world of Japanese animation, helping to brand myself as a mega-nerd for the rest of time. And though I now believe that the art form I once championed has si...
For fans of the franchise, Atelier Totori is a complete success. It improves upon Atelier Rorona in almost every conceivable way and delivers all of the gameplay, art style, characterizations and special brand of cuteness that the series' fans have com...
Abstract: Atelier Totori: The Adventurer of Arland is the direct sequel of Los Angeles based NIS America’s Atelier Rorona JRPG. If you didn’t play Atelier Rorona though, you won’t be missing anything, but for those that did, Atelier Totori lets players explore ...
Abstract: Totori Helmond has a problem. Her famous adventurer mother disappeared years ago and is presumed dead, but Totori believes she's still out there somewhere. Unfortunately, Totori isn't her mother; she's naive, clumsy, and not very smart. The only thing ...
Abstract: In 2010, PlayStation 3 owners were introduced to Gust’s Arland series with Atelier Rorona: The Alchemist of Arland, a flawed but enjoyable RPG made worth playing by its item synthesis system. Atelier Totori: The Adventurer of Arland, the direct sequel ...
Atelier Totori: The Adventurer of Arland is a wonderful continuation of the story that began in Atelier Rorona, but make no mistake – to get the full value and enjoyment out of this game, you need to have completed Rorona and received the True or Astri...
You get more time to play (five years versus three in Atelier Rorona), lots of characters from Atelier Rorona return, all recipe books are immediately available in shops, much easier to synthesis weapons and armor, locations are wide open to explore, jumping actually services a purpose with some very mild platforming in certain spots, you don’t have to pay people to adventure with Totori, you ca
Some of the voice acting may scar your ears (Peter), difficulty level for battles jumps after you reach Arland and after you build the boat, can be quite difficult to earn money and only equipped items and money carries over for New Game+. Also, you don’t get to make items that speed up traveling until late in the game.
Abstract: Published November 7th 2011. Written by Dominic Sheard. Gust has been developing Atelier titles since the early days of the PlayStation. It wasn’t until the PlayStation 2 era that we English-speaking gamers could finally get a chance to play the series...