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Miitopia jobs
Miitopia jobs











miitopia jobs

Relationships between your Miis actually do matter in combat, as they’ll help each other dodge attacks, form combos and heal each other based on the strength of their bonds.

#MIITOPIA JOBS PLUS#

It’s a huge plus to the game but also a major drawback. If you put two Miis together, eventually their relationship will turn romantic. This embrace of imagination is refreshing and plays perfectly to its young audience (and those of us merely young at heart).Īs far as character relationships go, queer relationships can happen, and probably will with or without your input. How about an actual tank? That’s a thing that exists too. A mad scientist with a ketchup bottle? You can do that too. Want to slay monsters as a princess with a pizza fan? You can do that. Of course, you have your typical RPG classes, like a mage, cleric and knight, but what makes it shine are the unusual ones thrown about the mix. Kind personalities can donate their recovery items without needing the relationship perk to do so, and so on and so forth. Laid-back types can conserve their magic power for weaker versions of spells, or get focused for stronger ones. Energetic types have moves that replenish the team’s magic, as well as a strong attack that causes a ton of damage all at once, but also recoils onto your character. Varied personality types, zany job classes and Mii relationships make the relatively average and straightforward combat a unique treat.Įach personality type has a specific attitude and move set within combat. When one Mii passes out in combat, a nearby Mii goes into a fit of vengeful rage. For example, instead of poison, spiders are thrown at you. You’re not going to see typical status effects here. The meat of the game, however, isn’t the story-it’s the customizable experience and the drop-in, drop-out gameplay that makes it worth the investment.Ĭombat is typical, run-of-the-mill turn-based RPG gameplay, but what makes it special are the weird and goofy quirks thrown in. All the faces of the people residing in the kingdom have been stolen, and you must recover those faces by defeating the monsters wearing them. You’re on a quest to stop the Dark Lord, played by a Mii of your choosing. You choose friends from your Mii stash on your 3DS, import them from Miitomo or Tomodachi Life, or create them in the game and cast them in your party and other various roles to be played throughout the story. Instead of choosing from a static pre-designed character, the player has control over who plays what in their story. Instead, it’s a very simplified RPG that doesn’t take itself too seriously, leaping beyond typical tropes, and offering a taste of Nintendo’s wobbly, bobbly Mii caricatures in an almost-parody of traditional RPGs. It’s not quite as storybook and fantastical as RPGs tend to be, but also not quite as gooby and artificial as puppet shows are, either. Miitopia is somewhere between a choose-your-own-adventure and puppet show.













Miitopia jobs