2020-4-2 Get Soul Sacrifice Delta, Action, RPG game for PSVita console from the official PlayStation® website. Know more about Soul Sacrifice Delta Game. Soul Sacrifice Delta is the ultimate edition of Soul Sacrifice with a lot of new content and improvements exclusively for the PlayStation®Vita. 発売中のプレイステーション Vita用ソフト『SOUL SACRIFICE DELTA. 期間内にPS Vita 本体などで、PS Vitaの3G通信プランの申し込みや更新を行うと、人気.
By Review Date: February 24, 2015First of, the game in a nutshell.You are a slave of a sorcerer named Magusar. Magusar sacrifices people and you are his slave, then you find a book and you read it to uncover Magusar's secred.
Long story short you live a life of a sorcerer. You have offerings(spells) and you fight monsters, when you kill them you have to choose 'sacrifice' or 'save'(and 'fate' in soul sacrifice delta) when you sacrifice you renew your offerings, when you save you fill your life bar. That's the gameWell the original game was released in 2013, the trailer was promising. We saw graphics in a very good quallity for a handheld console and boss battles. The game was very nice, good story soundtrack, combat was 'ok' the dark mystic atmosphere was satisfying. The problem was that.
Something was missing.This is where SS:Delta comes in. At last you feel like you are a powerfull sorcerer. Combat system has been enhanced, you can activate offerings(spells) while wielding other magic 'offensive' offerings.
Magic has been rebalanced, on the original SS the only thing you had to do was just to use 'throw' offerings and spamming them with the respective element and just kill it. Now they fixed that and many other things.Now SS:Delta has factions.
You have titles and you raise in their ranks, factions with different beliefs and goals, Avalon, Sactuarium, Grim. Depending on what faction you choose sacrifice, save and fate, effect changes. So choosing between those three will change your gameplay. A nice feature is the online faction ranking, it shows what is the best faction.Customising your character in delta is one of my favorite. It has many customes to choose from. In the original game you are bound to choose the whole custome but in Delta you can make a mix between headgear, top and bottom of the custome with different colors and there is more.
It has many many many different arms. You can make a unique sorcerer and go for battle.I really don't know what to say about this game.
SS:Delta is what SS has to be from the start. Now the game feels complete.
Even the story now has an end. There are so many offerings to collect so many monsters to fight, it has all the lore for every monster, map, faction, person, built in the game. The stories of the monsters are very well made, its like you are reading a very dark fairy tale. You have so many things to look up, from your combo of your offerings to the sigits on your arm to create an unstoppable sorcerer.So at the end you have:-A big quantity of spells to use-A big quantity of sigits-Many customes and arms to choose from-An insane amount of monsters to fight-Online gaming and features-Unique art, sound and music-A very nice storyThat was my first review, I am not good at this, I just like this game very very much and I wanted to write something about it.
Platform: PS Vita Publisher: SCEA Developer: Marvelous AQL/Comcept/SCE Japan Studio Medium: Digital Players: 1-4 Online: Yes ESRB: M
After dedicating dozens of hours hunting down the foulest of Archfiends and creatures, it’s a safe bet that Soul Sacrifice was one of my top three PS Vita releases of 2013. So as a fan, more Soul Sacrifice is not a bad thing. Even though it’s not the sequel we have been patiently waiting for, Soul Sacrifice Delta is an enhanced, content packed “ultimate edition” that PS Vita owners certainly should consider checking out.
For the uninitiated, Soul Sacrifice/Delta is a Monster Hunter-style game with a decidedly evil tone thanks to its twisted fairy tale-inspired creatures and mythos. You play the role of a soon-to-be-sacrificed slave who stumbles upon a living book that allows him to relive the memories of sorcerer tasked with defeating an evil sorcerer that may be the key to escaping captivity and/or surviving. The story, which is narrated by the main character and told in a unique page flipping, book/motion comic format, is deep, fairly disturbing and surprisingly interesting. Even when you can’t follow what the hell is going on (at least half the time), reading up on the lore behind the creatures and the setting of Soul Sacrifice is rather fascinating.
Soul Sacrifice Delta builds upon the story of the original Soul Sacrifice and features some new twists and turns, and enough changes to keep fans of Soul Sacrifice both busy and interested. For those who own the original version, game saves/content and equipment can be transferred over to Delta — including story progression (to an extent), although not everything is 100% unlocked from the onset. For those just getting into the series, playing or owning Soul Sacrifice isn’t a requirement, since all the content (and much more) is included here.
What differentiates Soul Sacrifice Delta from plain vanilla Soul Sacrifice? Well, the original Soul Sacrifice was incredibly deep and occasionally overwhelming with a huge number of quests (pacts) to take on, equipment/weapons/accessories to find, Archfiends, sorcerers and monsters to slay (or save), abilities/offerings/sigils/black rites to unlock, levels to earn, techniques to learn, and oh so much more. Even after putting 50+ hours into the original game, there was always something new to do especially with online co-op gameplay and the release of new content and quests. Delta adds way more to the game including tons of new pacts, a whole new faction system, many new creatures to take down and characters to save, in addition to brand new spells/equipment/accessories and deeper customization options. Even as a Soul Sacrifice veteran it was difficult to wrap my head around all of the game additions at first.
Delta also has more than its fair share of enhancements, both visually and in terms of gameplay. The graphic engine has been optimized, and beyond adding new weather effects and dynamic structures to the arenas, the game seemingly outputs at a higher resolution. Soul Sacrifice Delta looks fantastic on the PS Vita’s screen, and the fairy tale-inspired creatures and Archfiends are even more nightmare-inducing than before *shudder*. Three Little Pigs envisioned as a horribly twisted 3 headed abomination, or Snow White as a massive mirrored-eye cyclops with creepy apple minions is pretty damn freaky.
The tweaks to the gameplay in Delta will undoubtedly throw some Soul Sacrifice players off their game, but these changes were probably for the better. In the original, players could keep their distance from most dangerous creatures by spamming throw and long-distance elemental spells then going in for some heavy damage once they were incapacitated. In Delta, many of these abilities are nerfed in one way or another thanks to longer startup animations, weaker stats, or the general inability to fully inflict an elemental status. This was of course balanced out by adjusting the close and middle ranged spells and weapons and adding powerful new weapons, such as the spear, to encourage a little CQC. Players new to the series will probably adapt quickly, though experienced sorcerers will need to spend some time rethinking their strategies and loadouts. There is more than a fair share of changes to the already deep set of techniques available in Soul Sacrifice Delta.
A couple of the more dramatic updates in Delta involve the addition of a third “Grim” faction, along with the ability to remain neutral and neither Save nor Sacrifice your defeated enemies by choosing the new Fate option. Your actions on the battlefield and which faction you align with directly influence the rewards you earn for completing tasks and quests. By expanding on the largely binary arrangement in the first game, Delta feels like it takes a large step in evolving the Soul Sacrifice gameplay and character progression. There’s an insane amount of customization options available in Delta, from weapon combinations and loadouts, to stackable sigils and consumable rumors — it’s really a game that invites (and often requires) experimentation.
Like Soul Sacrifice, Delta most certainly has a learning curve and requires a bit of a commitment to “get into”. Once players successfully progress to the point where they hunt down their first Archfiend, destroy its cursed/ill parts, inflict elemental hell and cut it down to size, they are sure to be hooked. As is typical of the genre, teaming up with other sorcerers in the online co-op is a large part of the Soul Sacrifice Delta’s appeal. The single player can consume hundreds of hours of your life, but jumping online with 3 other players and hunting down rare Archfiends and top tier equipment is positively addicting. There’s definitely an element of repetition in the game, so be warned.
If you’re a PS Vita owner who passed on Soul Sacrifice and are still curious what this Monster Hunter fuss is all about, Soul Sacrifice Delta is a fine place to get started. This is by far the ultimate, complete Soul Sacrifice experience and even those who dumped countless hours into the original will find more than enough content and enhancements to keep them in the hunt.
$60 PlayStation Store Gift Card [Digital Code] (Software Download)