You can hire new adventurers or upgrade your town while waiting, but that takes a few seconds and then it’s back to resting and reading reports. Send adventurers out, rest till they come back, listen to their report, send them out again, repeat whole process forever. – The biggest problem: there isn’t much to do as guild head. Your characters don’t look anything like this. Once you know it’s a free-to-play game, the meh graphics, tedious gameplay and all the other flaws start to make a little more sense. Using famous designers for the cover art isn’t a crime, but when there’s such a huge disparity between dream and reality, somebody has to pay! The truth is, Bandai Namco released Yuugen Gaisha Brave Company almost simultaneously for the iPhone and the 3DS, so this is more or less a smartphone game that just happens to have a 3DS port. Where does it all go wrong? Maybe from the part where you notice the game cover looks like that and the in-game characters look like this: You’re a gamer, you should be used to disappointment by now. You play the head of a guild of adventurers whose job it is to handle the various quests that come in by hiring, equipping and dispatching adventurers, managing guild finances and developing the local sub-region all at the same time. Brave Company also has an interesting premise, especially for fans of simulation/management games. It looks mysterious and intriguing and action-packed all at the same time. The other good news is that if you like nice-looking covers, there’s a 3DS game called Yuugen Gaisha Brave Company that has a pretty good one. Now you can play games from any region on any 3DS, which is excellent news for those of us eagerly awaiting the release of 7th Dragon III Code: VFD in October. The good news is, the 3DS region-free hack works like a charm.
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