Definitely had fun revisiting this one. Groundbreaking at the time of release due to the aiming/control system. It's a little wonky but once you get used to it you can blow through enemies. It does fall apart as you get closer to the end, however. Encounters become frustrating trial and error, and all the boss fights are terrible and not designed around the players control limitations.

I love this game. It is terrible. The music is amazing. A true kusoge masterpiece. All hyperbole aside, if you love the Sega Saturn or kusoge, you definitely need to give it a play. All respect to the devs: It's a perfect example of something borne from pure ambition, with absolutely no time, money, or talent to go along with it.

High quality Saturn space dogfight sim with a fully voice acted story (shouts out to everyone that worked on the recent localization project). Pretty short but sweet. You get 2 different ship options that dramatically alter how you play (one of them allowing co op with one player piloting and the other shooting), and the story has some hidden branching points with different endings.

I loved this game. It's definitely an old school experience being a first person dungeon crawler, but the perspective is used in fun and immersive ways. The fairy mechanic also adds a layer of timing and strategy when exploring and dealing with enemy encounters. The story isn't much to write home about, but it is weird and kind of interesting (Spoiler: The Holy Ark is a UFO full of ghosts that's sent by god).

I loved it. Truly a classic. It's definitely on the short side, and there are a few annoyances (Unless you use a guide you're going to be Looking and Investigating the same things a whole bunch of times until the game decides you did it enough to trigger an event) but it's absolutely worth the play through for anyone that's a Kojima fan and hasn't already. If you aren't a fan of Kojima's writing, I'd say give it a pass. Some of the plot points might come off as baffling or wacky (Suncreen is absolutely vital to the plot) and might kill your desire to see it through to the end.