Close Menu
PS4 HomePS4 Home
  • Home
  • Best PS4 Games
  • Editorials
  • How To’s
  • FAQs
  • Accessories
  • PS5 Home
  • More
    • PS4 Game Guides
    • PS4 Games List
    • PS4 Wallpapers
    • PS4 Console Pictures
    • Other Gaming
      • PS5
What's Hot

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024
Facebook X (Twitter)
PS4 HomePS4 Home
Facebook X (Twitter)
  • Home
  • Best PS4 Games

    The Best PS4 Games for April 2024

    April 17, 2024

    The Best PS4 Games for March 2024

    April 17, 2024

    The Best PS4 Games for February 2024

    February 25, 2024

    The 50 Best PS4 Games Of All Time

    January 11, 2024

    The Best PS4 Games Coming In January 2024

    January 9, 2024
  • Editorials
  • How To’s
  • FAQs
  • Accessories
  • PS5 Home
  • More
    • PS4 Game Guides
    • PS4 Games List
    • PS4 Wallpapers
    • PS4 Console Pictures
    • Other Gaming
      • PS5
PS4 HomePS4 Home
Home»Editor's picks»Disciples: Liberation Review – The Student Becomes The Master
Editor's picks

Disciples: Liberation Review – The Student Becomes The Master

By PS4 HomeNovember 2, 2021No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit Email

Much is often made of games that feature moral choices and ask you to think about the consequences of your actions. For the most part, these games turn out to be mostly smoke and mirrors; while they offer choices that matter on the surface, those choices are ultimately revealed to be hollow, changing very little about the overall narrative or direction of the game. Disciples: Liberation is a new RPG in the Disciples series that purports to offer serious, weighted moral choices amid a deep turn-based strategy combat system, but can it succeed?

Disciples: Liberation tells the story of Avyanna, who, along with her best friend Orion, takes part in a botched assassination attempt early on in the narrative. Fleeing from the watchful gaze of the Empire, Avyanna and Orion find themselves in the city of Yllian, which Avy decides she’s going to use as a base from which to strike back and make a name for herself. What follows is a somewhat picaresque story in which Avy and Ori must forge alliances with some of the world of Nevendaar’s disparate factions; you’re somewhat free to choose the order in which you do so, too.

It’s a little difficult to get a foothold in the story of Disciples: Liberation. There’s a sense that there are parts missing from Avy and Ori’s journey; an introductory sequence showing who they are and what they’re about wouldn’t have gone amiss, as the game doesn’t really set up their characters adequately, meaning you’re just left to figure things out as you go. Environmental storytelling and background details should pick up the slack, but the fact is that Liberation often feels like it’s a core experience in search of a meatier narrative background to help establish some basic concepts.

See also  Why and How is FIFA 16 Going to be Better Than FIFA 15?

Happily, that problem doesn’t extend to the writing and general storytelling in Liberation. Things don’t start out well, but it’s not long before Avy is having to make some pretty knotty choices, some of which might affect her standing with certain factions. Balancing the approval of all the races and organisations of Nevendaar is the name of the game here, and it’s just as difficult as you might expect. Decisions might hurt your standing with a faction or upset one of your companions, which never feels fun; it’s one thing to see a morality meter tick down, but quite another to annoy someone you’ve been travelling with for a handful of hours.

Disciples: Liberation doesn’t have a conventional morality system, which comes as a breath of fresh air. The world it’s trying to present is ambiguous and complex; sure, the elves are murderous xenophobes, but they’re trying to protect and preserve a fragile culture, and even the demons aren’t all bad. Choices don’t reduce or raise your standing on some arbitrary meter; instead, they feel weighted and involved, which is testament to the quality of the writing on display in Disciples: Liberation. Existing in this world and making the choices it demands of you feels appropriately difficult.

Unfortunately, the phrase “appropriately difficult” doesn’t belong anywhere near the core combat in this game. Battles are a grid-based, turn-based affair in which you must order troops in both your Frontline and Backline. Frontline troops are capable of attacking, while Backline troops can provide support, so it’s a question of balancing these two aspects of your forces and making sure you’re managing them correctly. Enemies also utilise this system, so you’ll need to take enemy backline strategies into account when you’re forging your own combat tactics.

See also  Super Motherload Review

The early part of Disciples: Liberation is when the game is at its most difficult (and therefore its most interesting). When you don’t have access to a large army or a lot of companions, you need to make tactical decisions carefully, with a view to minimising casualties and making things as easy for yourself as possible. Later on, though, you can simply overwhelm the enemy with numbers, making for a lot of drawn-out, tedious fights during which you’ll be hammering buttons and trying to skip animations. That is until a story mission will suddenly spike the difficulty, leading to a slaughter for which you couldn’t possibly have prepared.

The story is involving enough to keep things moving, but the combat can’t sustain itself across all of Disciples: Liberation’s run time. Enemy AI isn’t particularly clever, but it has admirable self-preservation instincts, meaning that wounded enemies will often draw out fights for far longer than they need to go on. The new Conquer system bears some resemblance to classic JRPG EarthBound; if a battle is all but won, you can simply press a button to resolve the battle, granting you experience and gold without putting you through the needless tedium of engaging in the fight.

There’s also a base-building element to Disciples: Liberation, but it feels a touch underused. It won’t take you long to construct all of the elements you’ll need for a full playthrough in your base, and once that’s done, the base-building aspect doesn’t feel like it ever justifies itself again. It just feels like another interruption to the turn-based combat and moral choice systems that are the true beating heart of Disciples: Liberation. This is a game that feels like it’s tied itself in knots wanting to have extra systems, when it would have fared better if it had stuck to its guns.

See also  E3 2016: 5 Games That Need to be Announced on PS4

All in all, there’s a lot to like about Disciples: Liberation. It’s by no means a bad game; fans of turn-based combat experiences like XCOM or Gears Tactics will find plenty to love here, and if you’re a huge fan of CRPGs with knotty moral choice elements like Wasteland 3, there’s a lot to like. It’s undeniably shonky; some of the voice acting is weak, and there are a few bugs that need ironing out. However, there’s plenty to keep you occupied if you love any of the things Disciples: Liberation is good at, so make sure to check this one out if you want to occupy a week or so.

PS4 Home

This post didnt have a specific author and was published by PS4 Home.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Email
Previous ArticleWhat Non-PS Games Can I Play On PS4?
Next Article Looking at the best sports games available on the Playstation 4

Related Posts

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024

When Will Sony Stop Making Games for the PS4?

September 1, 2024

Is Your PS4 Still Worth Holding On To in 2024?

September 1, 2024

The Best PS4 Games for April 2024

April 17, 2024
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply

CAPTCHA ImageChange Image

Featured
Editor's picks

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024Updated:October 27, 2024

Is your PS4 running slower than usual? You might need to rebuild its database. This…

Editor's picks

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024Updated:October 13, 2024

Deleting a PS4 account might sound tricky, but with the right guidance, it’s straightforward. To delete…

Best PS4 Games

The Best PS4 Games for April 2024

April 17, 2024Updated:August 31, 2024

We’re well into 2024 now, and the PS4 has yet to give up the ghost,…

Best PS4 Games

The Best PS4 Games for March 2024

April 17, 2024Updated:August 31, 2024

It’s officially spring (well, according to the meteorological definition, anyway), and you know what that…

Our Picks

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024
Popular Guides

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024
Popular This Month

PS4 Backwards Compatibility – How To Play PS2 And PS3 Games On PS4

June 2, 2019

Adults: How to Watch Virtual Reality Porn on PlayStation VR

October 31, 2017

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024
PS4Home.com © 2012- 2023
Partners:    Gamerbolt.com | PS5Home.com


  • About us
  • Advertise

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.