


My favorite part of awesome games like this its the "New Game+" feature that allows you start from the begining with your monsters as good as you had them without loosing any valuables on them.

The story is cool but seems its more for ki ds, I don't like it so much. I think there are other awesome ways to make a game super awesome without exposing us to such things. The monster capturing and making them allies in battle with many awesome features for them, dude that's simply awesome and super fun! The thing I specially don't like its some diabolic directioned stuff that give perturbed meaning in the game in order to "make it cool", for me that's sometimes a deal breaker. And my favorite of all I've played, seen, and had its been this one for years. Though I don't have some of theme anymore. And have had like 53 video games in total, mostly RPGs like Final Fantasy 7, 8, 9, 10 and 10-2, 12, 13 and 13-2, the Star Ocean series, Pokemon series, and many others. I've been a hard core gamer since I was 6 years old. Dawn of the New World also features unlimited party combinations, meaning players can customize their traveling party with any number of monsters and people, including key characters from the original game, such as Lloyd and Collete. Gamers embarking on their quest can capture and collect more than 200 unique monsters, each capable of garnering experience points and growing into stronger - and in some cases, completely new - creatures. The game takes advantage of the Wii's graphical and motion-sensing capabilities, and the series' trademark real-time battles are bolstered by a new "free-run" system, dynamic unison attacks, and a strategic elemental system. Taking place two years after the original game combined the worlds of Slyvarant and Tethe'alla, Dawn of the New World puts gamers in charge of a new hero named Emil, who must help deal with all the sociological problems caused by the merging of the two worlds. Namco's "Tales" series of action RPGs makes its debut appearance on the Wii in this spin-off of the 2004 title Tales of Symphonia.
