I don't recall why I played this and I don't want to.

An ultimately better version in evey way possible. Play this instead.

Remaster came out halfway through my playthrough and I abandoned all motivation to ever finish this version.

Extra half-star for the Royal-exclusive chapter not being crap.

I don't know how it being so similar to P3D still managed to F up this hard. The soundtrack is generally unfitting for a rhythm game and all the remixes are ass. Generally not a lot of content, and the DLC is shared with P3D, most of which was obviously made to target that game instead.

This one is going to be complicated for me, but I'll try.
This game is often credited as "creating a genre" (which I'll address later) and being in general revolutionary. And after playing every previous game in the series (mainly in preperation for this one) I simply do not see that 10/10 perfect score.
Sure, it's a huge leap forward for the series: flawless animations, beautiful fully realized aesthetics and music, playtime of longer than 2 hours... But there's one issue here: Super Metroid came out 3 years earlier.
You see, there's a reason wht that game gets praised to bit: it reintrouces the rough formula from the first game, and pretty much perfects it. The game is long, but never fails to excite the player: even your average zoomie brain gets constant stimulation with new weapons, new movement tech, but counterbalances it with harder challenges which force you actually make use of those gadgets. The best part of it all, however, is the many uses the items have outside of opening color coded doors, as you generally get to use most of them anywhere: new beams hit harder, new movement items let you do more and move faster, new bombs can clear your screen etc. etc. and Samus at the start of the game is a completely different character from a demigod she eventually becomes at the end. And despite the long runtime, because of that, engagement never really drops, as new things get introduced at every turn, rewarding the player.
Now, here's SOTN whcih doesn't do that. Alucard, while a really cool character with a cool design, stays the fucking same throughout this long-ass dragged out adventure, and the only real movement upgrade he gets is a double jump. "B-but the bat and the wolf" -- nope, both are ass. The bat is a tool you get to fly places, but not a FUN form to interact it. Comparing with, say Space Jump from Metroid, which sometimes forces you to have proper timing, but most importnantly has no annoying animation to go though just to use, the bat form from SOTN is just a pain in the ass. AND you are forced to use it in the super secret "oh shit our game is too short let's pad out the runtime with more of the same but FLIPPED!!" segment just to navigate previously simple rooms. And the wolf? The form designed for speed? Yeah, this mutt can't jump. Should I even compare it to simply running as is to get speed in Metroid? And both forms get dropped when you get hurt too, because fuck fun I guess.
Due to the lack of real, tangible movement improvements, the game's exploration quickly becomes a chore. Underground caverns straight up have you travel to one side to unlock another boat spawn, to get to the other side to unlock water not hurting you. Both are useless outside of the caverns by the way, you just wasted your time as a part of the intended progression. And a lot of areas go like that: you MAY get a weapon/armor/item/familiar card, but most of the time you get a useless outside of a single room key item or some consumable. Oh yeah, consumables. This game has RPG elements, which means it must shower you in pointless junk you never use because that's what it means apparently...
The weapons you get are fun, but all essentially are used the same way. Some are slower, some are faster, some have special attributes, some have different hitboxes and all have different damage numbers. But they are always used the same way and hit in the same dirsction. For fucks's sake, none can be used vertically, they all work in the expected way. For the usual linear Castlevania game it would be fine, and even cool actually, but nah, we are wearing big boy shoes now, deal with that for 10+ hours. The rest of the "RPG" stuff in the game is just fluff, not really worth discussing. Items make number bigger, choose which number you want to get bigger now, not like it will change how your character plays. And using consumables has you scrolling trough menus to equip a shitstick which hits once for 30 damage and leaves you with an empty hand. Wow.
Now, why am I so angry at this game, which I didn't even really hate and in the end enjoyed it for what it was? Because I don't get it. Right under my review there are a dozen which call it a 10/10 "best in the series" masterpiece. I don't get what part of this game leaves them with such an impression. Is is this just the style alone? Am I just stupid? But oh wait, it created the word "Metroidvania", it makes this special? What even is this word?
Now, here's a spoiler, a redpill if you will: "metroidvania" is a meaningless buzzword created to classify other games with the names of the series it itself doesn't represent well: not all Metroid and Castlevania games are "metroidvania". And in fact, SOTN doesn't even exactly reinwent the formula, it attempts to replicate Metroid with it's own spin, which it does... Decently, actually. With how different the focus was, the game delivered well enough for the time, it successfully made it's series relevant again, and even gave it soft reboot if you will, despite being direct sequel to Rondo (which is a far better game don't @ me). But it's not some sort of grand revolution worth creating a genre over. Stop putting this game on such a pedestal, making people like me infinitely confused. And the thing is, I don't even think that Super Metroid is some flawless masterpiece. To make even more people mad, some future Metroid games are far better, I have zero nostalgia for either series. I just don't agree with this idea that SOTN is the game of similar quality which rivals it: it's a game focused on completely different thing, making it way worse in some of the most basic shit (like movement) and better in a lot more smaller details (the theme, style, animations, secrets, hotter protag etc.etc.)
Here's my rant. I don't know what I'm saying, I can't write. I just hope that it's not a peak of Castlevania games, because it's too damn fucking shallow to be one.

Better than P4D, all the remixes are generally good. Not as challening if you have played a proper rhythm vidya before. Play this if you like P3, not much value otherwise.

At least the menus look good, I guess. Sasuga Atlus.

After so many years of listening about how apparently great classic persona was, I went ahead and played it... 7 years after initially playing P3F.
It's been a long grind, but it feels bad to excessively hate on P2 like I did P1 due to the story just being really well done, both the main one across IS and EP as well as an extra scenario in EP's PSP port. But the gameplay is still really bad, and considering that you need to endure about 60 hours of it across both games I can't seriously bump the score up any higher and go around recommending those games to people. The best praise I can get is that it's not as stupid and annoying as P1, and there's at least some semblence of logic present here.
I can only hope that Atlus decides to remake these games already, but right now? Proceed with caution, and play PS1 version of P2IS and PSP version of P2EP for the best experience.

The story sucks, the gameplay sucks, but some scenes are funny and the music's alright.