Nights of Azure

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Nights of Azure
Nights of Azure Cover Art.png
Developer(s) Gust
Publisher(s) Koei Tecmo
Producer(s) Keisuke Kikuchi
Artist(s) Yoshiku
Composer(s) Kazuki Yanagawa
Daisuke Achiwa
Hayato Asano
Platform(s) PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, Microsoft Windows
ReleasePlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita
  • JP: October 1, 2015
PlayStation 4
  • JP: October 1, 2015 [1]
  • NA: March 29, 2016 [2]
  • EU: April 1, 2016 [3]
  • AU: April 8, 2016
Microsoft Windows
  • WW: February 7, 2017
Genre(s) Action role-playing
Mode(s) Single-player

Nights of Azure [a] is a 2015 action role-playing video game developed by Gust and published by Koei Tecmo for the PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita and Microsoft Windows. [4] [5] [6] The PlayStation 4 version received a North American release on March 29, 2016, [7] with a European release following on April 1, 2016, and a Microsoft Windows release on February 7, 2017. [3]

Contents

The game was followed up by a sequel titled Nights of Azure 2: Bride of the New Moon, released August 2017 in Japan, and October 2017 worldwide.

Gameplay

The game features an RPG battle system where characters fight alongside contracted demons known as Servans. These demons can be summoned during battle through the use of SP, and are categorized into attacker and support types. As they become stronger through subsequent battles, they gain new abilities. [8] [9] [10]

Arnice can also land attack chains using light, heavy and special attacks, with each chain gradually filling a transformation gauge. When gauge is full, the player can trigger a transformation which increases her offensive power. This demon form allows her to control flames, while her rabbit form focuses on speed and melee combat, and her phantom form improves her recovery capabilities. [11] She is also able to transform her blood into creating different types of blood power weapons depending on the situation, such as daggers and longswords, which change her attack moveset and the abilities of summoned demons. [9] [12]

Drops of blue blood are gained by defeating enemies and completing quests, [13] and they can be spent as currency at certain shops or used to level up the main playable character, Arnice. [14] The Ende Hotel acts as a hub world, allowing the player to accept quests, buy items, plan daytime activities, change equipment, and save the game. [14] [15] [13]

The game also contains an optional arena where players can take on various challenges and earn rewards, and these include battles with special restrictions placed upon them and fighting against enemies within a labyrinth. [10]

Setting

The game follows the journey of two girls and is set on the fictional island-kingdom of Ruswal, where nights are plagued by Azure-blooded demons, where no one sleeps at night. Although it is dangerous for humans to leave their homes after dark, the brave knights known as the Curia are trained to fend off the ever growing threat. After humans emerged victorious from the battle against the demonic Nightlord many years ago, the blue blood from the monster scattered and polluted those who bathed in it, changing them into creatures known as fiends, which steal night-time from the people. Although Arnice has polluted blood, her heart remained intact. [8] [16]

Characters

Development

The game was developed under the leadership of development producer Keisuke Kikuchi who has previously worked on the Deception and Fatal Frame game series, while the general producer was Tadanobu Inoue. The character sprites and background art were illustrated by Yoshiku. [4] [20] The game, along with the other Social Gust game, Atelier Sophie, experienced delays in release citing final adjustments as the reason for delay. [21]

First-print copies of the game featured DLC codes for Gust from Hyperdimension Neptunia as a subordinate demon. [1]

Reception

Famitsu gave the game a review score of 32/40. [24] The game sold a total of 79,227 physical retail copies across all three platforms within its first week of release in Japan. [26]

The game received "mixed or average reviews", according to review aggregator Metacritic. [27]

Notes

  1. Japanese: よるのないくに, Hepburn: Yoru no Nai Kuni, lit. "Land Without Night"

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