<rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">	<channel>		<title>New Games Tagged 'square' on The Great Games Experiment</title>		<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/games/recent/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>		<description>New Games on The Great Games Experiment</description>		<image>			<url>http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/css/logo.jpg</url>			<title>New Games Tagged 'square' on The Great Games Experiment</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/games/recent/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>		</image>		<language>en-us</language>		<item>			<title>Teleporter Twins</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/teleporter-twins/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/6/6d5064cc7513a94931f066fd67fc97f2_sq.png" title="Teleporter Twins Image" /> <div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>20 Jun 2008 06:22:50</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Kermix</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/kermix/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/2/29279c535309391e733ac1f56732e136_sq.jpg" title="Kermix Image" /> <div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>07 Feb 2008 03:34:42</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Kingdom Hearts: 358!2 Days</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/kh3582days/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/d/d9e081340a40dd0c1b2b0b4df4713b4a_sq.jpg" title="Kingdom Hearts: 358!2 Days Image" /> <div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>20 Sep 2007 11:00:15</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Kingdom Hearts: Birth By Sleep</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/khbirthbysleep/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/9/94c594caa7f39dfe8ac7c693718bee57_sq.jpg" title="Kingdom Hearts: Birth By Sleep Image" /> <div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>20 Sep 2007 10:43:38</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo Tales</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/chocobotales/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/0/0dee4bad691a14f755b28ae7222dcc9e_sq.jpg" title="Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo Tales Image" /> Chocobo Tales follows a story from a Chocobo's point of view. In the story, an evil book's been opened and almost all the Chocobos have been sucked into the pages. One was spared. You are this Chocobo. It's up to you to save your friends from the bookworld by performing tasks and playing mini games that propel the story forward.<br />
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The RPG portion takes place in full 3D, with a style and visual appeal that's to be expected from Final Fantasy. But when Chocobo gets sent into the book, the game takes on a very unique style all its own.  It's very smililar to a pop-up book which almost looks like it was drawn with crayons. <br />
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With Chocobo Tales, Toshiyuki Itahana, of Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles fame, brings his signature character design stylings to the tale of a chocobo's journey through a land of fairytales.  Creatures from the by-now familiar FF bestiary take on roles in Aesop and Brothers Grimm tales--like the Tortoise and the Hare becoming the Adamantoise and the Cactuar--in Square Enix's chocobo-themed take on familiar childhood yarns.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>07 Mar 2007 01:11:19</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Secret of Evermore</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/SecretofEvermore/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/1/1951dfe94eccbce61e10ad68b8eea1cc_sq.jpg" title="Secret of Evermore Image" /> Secret of Evermore, released in North America on September 18, 1995, is a role playing video game for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System video game console. The game was created by Square Co., Ltd.'s new development house, Square USA. <br />
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The story of Secret of Evermore revolves around an anonymous teenage boy and his dog, whom the player may assign names of up to fifteen characters each (a tremendous amount at the time, when names were typically six characters or shorter). In the beginning of the game, the boy, who has a penchant for B-movies, is leaving with his dog from a matinee in a small town called Podunk, USA. Upon leaving the theatre, the dog begins to chase after a cat in the street. The boy hurriedly follows his best friend, finally reaching a large, abandoned mansion. When the dog begins to chew on some wires in a hidden laboratory, the pair soon find themselves transported to the mysterious world of Evermore.<br />
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Throughout the course of the game, the player explores Evermore's main areas, many corresponding to different epochs of Earth's history: Prehistoria is an area with dense jungle and primitive men; Crustacia is a land of pirates; Nobilia remembers the Roman Empire and Ancient Egypt; Gothica draws on the Middle Ages; and Omnitopia is a futuristic space station.<br />
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In each of the four areas, the boy will encounter a citizen of Podunk involved in the original experiment gone awry 30 years ago in the same mansion where the boy and his dog were transported to Evermore. The player will learn that the regions are manifestations of those citizens' personal Utopias. The boy's ultimate goal is to escape from this fantasy world and return to his hometown of Podunk.<br />
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The game shares two major surface similarities with Secret of Mana: It uses a freshly coded interpretation of that game's ring-based menu system, and it requires the player to control multiple characters one-at-a-time. The player guides both the boy and his apparently shapeshifting dog through Evermore, free to switch between characters and sometimes forced to do so to solve various puzzles.<br />
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A unique element to Secret of Evermore is its system of magic. Rather than using a traditional system of collecting magic points and using them to cast learned spells, the boy must, with the help of his trusty dog's nose, find various ingredients that may be used to perform alchemic formulas which the alchemists across Evermore teach him; the rarer the ingredient, the fewer times a particular spell may be cast. <br />
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The boy wields four different styles of weapons throughout the game: sword, spear, axe, and bazooka. His Bone Crusher is roughly categorized as the first sword. Each type of weapon has different characteristics; for instance, the spears at a high enough level may be thrown at an enemy across the screen, while the swords and axes can cut swaths of destruction around the boy's vicinity. With the exception of the Bone Crusher, all swords, axes, and spears may cut through vegetation. The boy operates the bazooka for the first battle of the game, but abruptly loses it and only receives it again at Ebon Keep to utilize against the deadliest monsters near the end of the game. Each category of weapon has four versions (one for each world the boy visits), and repeated use of them can increase their levels to a maximum of three, unlocking a new charged attack move with each level. The bazooka has three types of ammunition, each more destructive than the last; no charged attacks are possible, and when ammo runs dry, the bazooka can be swung as a weak club.<br />
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Although both the boy and his dog are playable characters for the majority of the game, Secret of Evermore is a single-player game.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>02 Mar 2007 06:32:08</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/khchainofmemories/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/8/8cd8b337e4a49b07cfe46557d5efb1af_sq.jpg" title="Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories Image" /> Chain of Memories falls between Kingdom Hearts and Kingdom Hearts II, filling in many important plot points.  The game abandons a true action style in favor of a fast paced card-type game.  The game was originally released on the Game Boy Avance and set for re-release on the PS2.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>07 Feb 2007 09:53:39</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Kingdom Hearts</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/kingdomhearts/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/0/06927fa6b7090282a30be4df90a7459e_sq.gif" title="Kingdom Hearts Image" /> Many thought the idea of a Square/Disney crossover was doomed from the start.  On the contrary, it is one of the most successful franchises in Square's library.  You take control of Sora who ventures out with Donald and Goofy to find his friends Riku and Kairi.  Your journey takes you through many Disney worlds.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>07 Feb 2007 09:47:54</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Secret Of Mana</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/secretofmana/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/5/546baba9945733fe6f93d86a384d8aab_sq.jpg" title="Secret Of Mana Image" /> Secert of Mana was a game modeled more after the Legend of Zelda than the typical Square RPG.  It was also one of the first action RPGs to allow for multi-player simultaneous play with two or three players.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>07 Feb 2007 09:40:21</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Star Ocean: Till the End of Time</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/so3/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/b/b13c40c8b86df7d5b0258ae33a66877d_sq.jpg" title="Star Ocean: Till the End of Time Image" /> The third main game in the Star Ocean video game series. The game was developed by tri-Ace and published by Square Enix for the PlayStation 2 console system. It was released in Japan, North America, and the PAL territories. The original Japanese release date was in February of 2003 by Enix, shortly before its merger to become Square Enix. It was re-released in 2004 as a &quot;Director's cut&quot; version, which the North American and European ports are based on. The game takes place four hundred in-universe years after the first two Star Ocean games.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>06 Feb 2007 10:15:55</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Final Fantasy IX</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/ffix/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/a/acfa733511daeead1aa8174e1fbe57f2_sq.jpg" title="Final Fantasy IX Image" /> Final Fantasy IX (&atilde;&fnof;&bull;&atilde;&sbquo;&iexcl;&atilde;&sbquo;&curren;&atilde;&fnof;&Scaron;&atilde;&fnof;&laquo;&atilde;&fnof;&bull;&atilde;&sbquo;&iexcl;&atilde;&fnof;&sup3;&atilde;&sbquo;&iquest;&atilde;&sbquo;&cedil;&atilde;&fnof;&frac14;IX, Fainaru Fantaj&Auml;&laquo; Nain?) is a console role-playing game developed by Square Co., Ltd. in 2000. It was published in Japan by Square, in North America by Square Electronic Arts, in continental Europe by Infogrames, and in the United Kingdom and Australasia by Square Europe. It was the last original game in the Final Fantasy series to be produced for the PlayStation. The game was developed alongside Final Fantasy VIII, but took a completely different path in line with fans' requests to return to the series roots via castles and other allusions to games in the series. Final Fantasy IX introduced new features to the series, such as the Active Time Event, Mognet, and a revamped equipment and skill system.<br />
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Set in the fantasy world Gaia, Final Fantasy IX's plot centers on a war between two nations, sparked by an ambitious queen. Players follow a young thief named Zidane, who joins with the others to defeat the Queen. Soon after embarking on their quest, they discover that the queen's campaign is a cover up for a greater plot involving a parallel world and Zidane's past.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>06 Feb 2007 10:00:58</pubDate>		</item>	</channel></rss>