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1996 video game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lennus II: Fūin no Shito (レナスII 封印の使徒, "Lennus II: The Apostles of the Seals") is a 1996 role-playing video game for the Super Famicom. It was developed by Copya System, and published by Asmik Corporation.
Lennus II: Fūin no Shito | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Copya System |
Publisher(s) | Asmik Corporation |
Director(s) | Hidenori Shibao |
Composer(s) | Kōhei Tanaka |
Platform(s) | Super Famicom |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | Role-playing video game |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
The game takes place on the moon named "Eltz" that orbits the planet "Raiga".[1] The first game took place on Lennus, another moon of Raiga.[1] The plot centers around a hero, Falus.[2]
Gameplay is fairly similar to the original Lennus / Paladin's Quest:
The game was developed by Copya system,[3] and published by Asmik Corporation.[4] It is a sequel to Lennus: Memory of the Ancient Machine.[5] Enix brought the original Lennus to North America as Paladin's Quest.[5][3]
The game was directed and written by Hidenori Shibao, who also directed the original.[5][6] The music for the game was made by Kohei Tanaka.[7] Shibao was writing strategy guides and making 20 million yen per year, but working on Lennus II he was only making 2 million yen a year.[1] The game took four years to finish, instead of the planned two years.[1] Shibao said: "It was like the entire project was cursed!"[1]
Developer Copya System changed its name to "Shangri-La" in 1996.[3]
Lennus II was released on July 28, 1996 for the Super Famicom.[4] A Nintendo Power version was released on December 1, 1997.[4] According to Shibao the game didn't sell well and he described it as "a huge bomb".[1] For that reasons, plans for Lennus III were shelved, and the game was never made.[1] The plot for the third game would have focused on the planet Raiga itself, and the construction of the two moons.[1]
Enix had closed its American headquarters by this time, and focus shifted to the Nintendo 64.[2] The game has never been released outside of Japan,[8][3] but a fan translation of the game into English was created for it in 2008.[9][2]
Two tracks from the game were recorded by the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra for release on the Orchestral Game Concert compilations.[10][11]
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