Best PS2 Games That Came Out After the PS3 Launched

Best PS2 Games That Came Out After the PS3 Launched
Views: 0

Summary

  • PlayStation 3’s launch was rough due to its high price and a weak lineup of games.
  • After the PS3 release, gems like Rogue Galaxy, King of Fighters 2002, and Odin Sphere came out on PS2.
  • Games like Persona 3 also came out and helped tide players over before switching to the PS3.

The PS3 came out in November 2006 and had a pretty bad launch. It cost way too much, at $599 ($938 today), and it had a weak lineup of games. Developers had trouble figuring out its complicated cell processor, and its backward compatibility ended up getting limited over time. Only its few early models could play PS2 games, with later models limiting its backward compatibility to PS1 games alone.

Related


25 PS3 Hidden Gems Everyone Missed

The PS3 has a pretty sizable library of games. So it’s natural for some great titles to have gone unnoticed. Do yourself a favor and try these out.

So, unless people had the cash to splash back in 2006, players had to keep their PS2s running to play their old games. Which is just as well, as it had a better time bowing out than the PS3 had coming in. Players got to play these great PS2 games that came out after the PS3’s launch, then got a PS3 when it managed to bounce back (if they didn’t move onto the Xbox 360/Wii/PC anyway).

8

Rogue Galaxy

Space RPG Takes Over a Year to Reach Global Audiences

Systems

Released

January 30, 2007

Developer(s)

Level-5

Since most people in the West don’t import their games, this list is based on the game’s US release dates. Otherwise, Rogue Galaxy wouldn’t qualify. Level-5’s action RPG originally came out in Japan in December 2005, and technically didn’t make it out of Japan. What North America and the rest of the world got in 2007 was the game’s enhanced ‘director’s cut’ edition.

It fixed up the character animations, added more weapons and items, and fixed its Burning Strike system where players could choose when they pulled off these devastating moves. However, while it garnered critical success and won a few awards, it didn’t shift enough units to make it a competitor to Dragon Quest or Final Fantasy. It had to make do with being a cult classic instead, winning over a keen, niche audience.

7

King of Fighters 2002: Unlimited Match

SNK’s Nightmare Turns into a Dream Come True

The King Of Fighters 2002 Unlimited Match

The King of Fighters series liked to close off their story arcs with a big ‘dream match’ game, where they’d cram as many characters as possible from the prior entries into one big game. It worked for KOF ’98, which is still considered by many to be the best game in the series. KOF 2002 was more compromised by comparison, thanks to SNK going bankrupt at the time. Once they recovered, they decided to remake both dream matches for the PS2.

KOF ’98: Ultimate Match was fine, though it wasn’t much of an improvement over the base game. Unlike King of Fighters 2002: Unlimited Match, which was remade from the ground up. It offered completely new stages and music, and featured literally everyone from KOFs 99-2002 (bar the notorious K9999), including its intense boss fights. KOF ’98‘s gameplay is still stronger, but in terms of content, KOF 2002: UM is at the top of the tree.

6

Odin Sphere

Cult Classic Action RPG Still Offers a Unique Experience Over its Remake

  • Developer: Vanillaware.
  • Platform: PlayStation 2.
  • Release: May 2007.

Made as a spiritual successor to the Sega Saturn game Princess Crown, Odin Sphere follows five heroes at different points in time as they try to save the continent of Erion from Armageddon. It combined the fast-paced action of sidescrolling beat ‘em ups with the intricacies of an RPG, as even physical attacks require enough POW gauge to use. The game was a critical hit, impressing people with its gameplay and worldbuilding, which combined fantasy tropes with Shakespearean elements.

Related


8 Best 2D Hack And Slash Games, Ranked

There’s a lot to love in these action-packed hack-and-slash games, delivered in charming 2D art styles and graphics.

But it didn’t exactly wow people into buying it in droves, as 2D action RPGs weren’t an easy sell in the late 2000s. But it got a second chance when its own spiritual successor, Dragon’s Crown, caught on years later. It was remade for the PS3 as Odin Sphere Leifthrasir, which brought in more elements from Dragon’s Crown and Muramasa: The Demon Blade to focus more on the action, at the cost of the original game’s magical and alchemic elements.

5

GrimGrimoire

Vanillaware’s RTS Beats Harry Potter At His Own Game

The same audience that grew cold to Odin Sphere wasn’t any warmer to GrimGrimoire. It was an RTS inspired by StarCraft where Lillet Blan, a new student at the Tower of Silver Star, must stop the evil wizard Calvaros from finding the Philosopher’s Stone. Her only hope of doing that is by making use of a time loop to learn more about the school and its families.

By using their different units, each representing a different kind of magic (necromancy, alchemy, etc), players can reclaim the school by taking on Calvaros’ forces and replacing their runes with their own. The game also did well in reviews, while faltering in sales. But it would get a remake in GrimGrimoire Once More, and it would inspire Vanillaware’s other school-based RTS 13 Sentinels: Aegis Rim.

4

Persona 3

Systems

Released

July 13, 2006

ESRB

M for Mature: Blood, Language, Partial Nudity, Violence

Born from the Shin Megami Tensei series, the Persona games have arguably outgrown its roots, as people are more familiar with its high school shenanigans and mysteries than SMT’s more dire circumstances. That said, it took a while to catch on, as many of the franchise’s fans got into its later games.

For example, Persona 3 was the first game to introduce social links, where bonding with the right characters could provide XP boosts for different Arcana. They would become a key part of every game following it, including P3’s own different re-releases. The most notable one is P3: FES, as it has an additional epilogue and story elements that weren’t included in its PS5 remake, P3: Reload.

3

Persona 4

Persona’s Last PS2 Game Ends Up Reinvigorating the Series

Nonetheless, as grand as Persona 3 was, it didn’t get the reception Persona 4 did. It became the best-selling PS2 game on Amazon for a while when it was released, and its Golden edition became a good reason to get a PlayStation Vita back in 2012. It even made an impact as a fighting game via its spin-offs, P4: Arena and P4: Arena Ultimax.

Related


Persona 4: Every Party Member From Worst To Best, Ranked

Persona 4 has an incredibly tight knit party where every character shines, but some party members are better than others.

Old-school fans may still prefer the dungeon-crawling antics of the first two games, and some might prefer P3’s take on social links. But P4’s mix of life sim events and dungeon battling are what made the game stand out over its rivals, and helped it catch on with a new generation of fans. If it isn’t the best Persona game, it’s certainly the most popular.

2

Devil Summoner 2: Raidou Kuzunoha Vs King Abaddon

Save Early 20th Century Japan by Chatting Up Demons

Systems

Still, Persona isn’t the only series to spin off from the Shin Megami Tensei games. It wasn’t even SMT’s first spin-off. The SMT: Devil Summoner games came out in 1995, a year prior to Revelations: Persona, though they wouldn’t escape Japan’s shores until Devil Summoner: Raidou Kuzunoha Vs the Soulless Army, an RPG that did away with SMT‘s turn-based bouts for real-time action.

It was good, but the sequel, Devil Summoner 2: Raidou Kuzonoha Vs King Abaddon, was better. It added more strategy to the proceedings, as players had to negotiate with the demons to gain their loyalty. Once gained, they can be fused with other demons to produce stronger summons. If players knew how to win the devils over, they could become a force to be reckoned with.

1

God of War 2

Developers Stick to Their Guns to Make a Phenomenal Sequel

Systems

The original God of War didn’t match Devil May Cry in terms of intricate gameplay. But when it came to straightforward gameplay and spectacle, it became a tour de force. Surprisingly, Sony Santa Monica stuck with the PS2 for God of War 2 since the console had a larger player base. Plus, they figured fans could use the PS3’s backward compatibility to play the game on that system anyway. If only they had the benefit of hindsight back then.

Still, it might’ve been for the best, as Sony Santa Monica managed to get the best out of GoW1‘s engine to offer more spectacle, more boss fights, more weapons, wider level variety, and smoother gameplay over its predecessor. Instead of offering up a clunkier, GoW-lite experience like its rivals (see Heavenly Sword and Dante’s Inferno), GoW2 became one of the best entries in the series, if not the best, rivaled only by its eventual PS3 successor God of War 3.

More


8 Best PS3 Games That Came Out After The PS4 Launched

Even after the launch of PlayStation 4, many games still released on the PlayStation 3.

Source link