Ys: The Vanished Omens
Description official descriptions
In this game, the player takes the role of Adol (Aron in the English-language Sega Master System version) Christin, a red-haired adventurer and expert swordsman. One day he encounters a fortune teller who sends him on a quest to find information about the six books of Ys. It appears that there was once an ancient land called Ys, whose secret was sealed in those six books. Before long Adol learns that the six books were all stolen by the evil wizard Dark Fact (Dulk Dekt in the Sega Master System version, Malificus in the English-language computer versions). It is Adol's task to defeat the villain and discover the secret of Ys!
Ys: The Vanished Omens is an action role-playing game with its own trademark combat system: instead of pressing the "attack" button, the protagonist simply runs into the enemies he encounters. More damage is inflicted upon the enemies if Adol charges at them from the back or from the sides - a head-to-head collision might result in the hero's death if the monster is stronger than him. The player gains gold and experience points for defeating foes; once enough experience has been accumulated, Adol levels up and becomes stronger. The hero can buy and equip swords, armor, shields, and other accessories.
Spellings
- イース - Japanese spelling
Groups +
Screenshots
Credits (MSX version)
27 People (15 developers, 12 thanks) · View all
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[ full credits ] |
Reviews
Critics
Average score: 78% (based on 19 ratings)
Players
Average score: 4.0 out of 5 (based on 46 ratings with 4 reviews)
This game did what Playstation could only do decades later...
The Good
It's a cute game for one thing. Very similiar to many Playstation Anime RPG's when RPG's first became popular in Playstation.
The game is simple enough...probably too simple for my tastes now, but I do recall it being fun when I played it then. The game has a very clear (and short) story line that is similiar to Playstation RPG's: Talk to people, complete their quests, kill monsters on the way.
The game is divided into 3 major places: The town, wilderness and dungeons. The town of course is where are the people are, where you get quests, buy stuff, etc. Wilderness is the area-in-between from the town to a certain place you want to go. Random monsters weren't created yet if I'm not mistaken, so you know what to expect each time monsters re-generate. Dungeons represent places where there is a certain quest you have to complete. Of course it's packed with monsters.
The Bad
The game as I said was simple. A little too simple. I usally enjoy RPG's that have 'unique features', something this game did not present much of. Or maybe because this game was one of first in its line...
The Bottom Line
Well, it ain't bad for an RPG. Could've been much better if they put a little more 'effort' in it...
DOS · by Indra was here (20752) · 2004
There just isn't any good reason to play this game.
The Good
Charming in that Japanese anime sort of way.
The Bad
Ys has all of the bad things about Japanese console RPGs, with almost none of the good. Graphics are weak even by the PC standards of the day. Combat is excessively simple (bump into your opponent!) and extremely monotonous. The plot is ok, but nothing that special. There really isn't anything in Ys that isn't done much better by countless other Japanese-style RPGs.
The Bottom Line
I would only recommend this game to very small children or other people who enjoy lots of repetition.
DOS · by PCGamer77 (3158) · 2013
The Good
Ys: The Vanished Omens was one of the best Sega Master System games to be released, at in America. Everything about the game is groundbreaking, both as an RPG and as a game for the ill-fated Master System.
The Sega Master System was quite popular in many nations, but its success in the United States was much more limited. For American Master System owners, such as myself, this meant that we only had official access to a small library of games, many of which were not terribly good.
Luckily, Ys: The Vanished Omens was one of the Sega Master System games to be officially released in America. I had never heard of the Ys series prior to playing this game, and (for years) was I disappointed by the fact that this was the only Ys game given a American release.
Everything about this game -- its graphics, music, storyline, character development and playability -- is perfect. The game shows off what the Master System can do, in the right hands, and it also introduced Americans to one of the best RPG series that has ever existed.
The Bad
The worst thing about this game was, that (after beating the game) no sequel existed for us, lowly, Americans.
NEC gamers got Ys I and II released together as a CD set, which (as far as I could tell) was the only way for Americans to officially play the second game. Instead, Ys III (not Ys II) was -- eventually -- given an official released on the Sega Genesis.
I had hoped that the Ys series would be re-released for the Xbox 360, but that does not seem to be in the pipeline.
The Bottom Line
Ys: The Vanished Omens is a great Master System game. It is one of the best RPG game series ever made. It is also probably the best Master System released in American Hopefully, more American gamers will -- one day -- be able to explore all the Ys games.
SEGA Master System · by ETJB (428) · 2014
Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
Translation patch? | Edwin Drost (9558) | Feb 18, 2021 |
Trivia
Name changes
Ancient Land of Ys was ported to many different computers and consoles, but the PC port was the only one to change the names of some of the game characters.
NES translation patch
On March 30th, 2000, fan translator David Mullen released a complete Japanese-to-English patch for the Nintendo version. You can download it here.
Information also contributed by j. jones
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Related Sites +
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The Ancient Ys Library
A good website dedicated to all games in the series.
Identifiers +
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Trixter.
J2ME added by john brandstetter. Windows added by firefang9212. BREW added by Kabushi. PC-98, PC-88 added by Terok Nor. Apple IIgs added by Игги Друге. NES, SEGA Master System, FM-7, Sharp X1, MSX added by Unicorn Lynx.
Additional contributors: Unicorn Lynx, chirinea, Sciere, Alaka, Kabushi, formercontrib.
Game added August 23, 1999. Last modified January 20, 2024.