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The latest entry in the Castlevania series, released in August 4, 2010 for the Xbox 360's Live Arcade, and in September 27, 2011 for the Playstation Network. It's the first original 2D Castlevania for a home console since Symphony of the Night, with a heavy focus on online gameplay. The "plot" involves a cursed book known as the Grimoire, where the story of Castlevania has come to life within. However, the written personas of the various heroes and villains of the series have also come to life and must fight to put an end to the curse (or take over the book.) There is up to six-player online coop on both versions, and up to four-player local co-op on the PlayStation 3 version, and while players do not have to stick together, it is somewhat encouraged due to the Dual Crushes and the difficulty.
Initial reactions were mixed, between So Cool Its Awesome and So Okay It's Average. However, it has gained a larger amount of appeal due to the DLC characters, stages, and even music. Info about the characters and stages is below.
Characters[]
Starting:
- Alucard: From Symphony of the Night. Wields several different kinds of weapons, but mainly swords and is the only character who can use shields (although their use is questionable in the long run). Can use Dark Magic by finding spell scrolls, although he no longer has subweapons or familiars. The only remnants of his alternative forms are a temporary Mist form and his Wolf Charge, which has been reduced to a mere slide. His Dark Magic gets stronger the more you collect. His theme music is Pitiful Scion, better known as The Tragic Prince from Symphony of the Night, and is available as DLC in the first Music Pack.
- Soma Cruz: From Aria of Sorrow and Dawn of Sorrow. Like Alucard, he wields several kinds of weapons but mainly swords. Unlike Alucard, his weapon catalog is more diverse, ranging from axes to cudgels and even guns. Can use the Power of Dominance to absorb enemy souls and gain more attacks. Souls become enhanced the more they are collected. His theme music is Pitch-Black Intrusion from Dawn of Sorrow, and is available as DLC in the first Music Pack.
- Jonathan Morris: From Portrait of Ruin. Wields the Vampire Killer only, losing his extensive library of weapons from Portrait of Ruin. Also has access to various Martial Arts and subweapons, some even exclusive to him. His Vampire Killer becomes stronger when his subweapons increase in level, and increasing all of them to 9 unlocks the full powered Vampire Killer, which deals Holy damage. His theme music is Invitation of a Crazed Moon from Portrait of Ruin, and is available as DLC in the first Music Pack.
- Charlotte Aulin: From Portrait of Ruin. Wields the Book of Binding. She can use the book to bind monsters attacks and use them as spells. Her main attack will produce more weapons out of the tome the more spells are collected. Her theme music is The Hidden Curse from Portrait of Ruin, and is available as DLC in the first Music Pack.
- Shanoa: From Order of Ecclesia. Wields weapons and magic from Glyphs. She can find more weapon Glyphs through boss chests, and more magic Glyphs by absorbing attacks from enemy monsters. She also has Magnes, a key Glyph for exploring. Spells can be leveled up, but otherwise there are no aesthetic or notable changes. Her theme music is An Empty Tome from Order of Ecclesia, and is available as DLC in the first Music Pack.
DLC Characters:
- Julius Belmont (DLC for 360 version only; available at the start in the PlayStation 3 version): From Aria of Sorrow and Dawn of Sorrow. Wields the Vampire Killer whip much like Simon Belmont did in Super Castlevania IV, with eight-directional whipping and the ability to grab on Magnes points. Unlike Jonathan, he only has access to the traditional Belmont subweapons and only has 2 Martial Arts, one of them being Omnia Vanitas, his teleport dash from Aria of Sorrow. His whip has the longest range of all the whip characters. His theme music is Can't Wait Until Night ~Heart of Fire~ from Aria of Sorrow, and is available as DLC in the second Music Pack.
- Yoko Belnades (DLC for 360 version only; available at the start in the PlayStation 3 version): From Aria of Sorrow and Dawn of Sorrow. Wields the Belnades Staff, which no longer gives a life bonus when hitting enemies. Uses her three spells from Dawn of Sorrow: Blue Splash, Holy Flames, and Holy Lightning. Has the most powerful spells of all the magic users. Her theme music is Aquarius from Castlevania III and Circle of the Moon, and is available as DLC in the second Music Pack.
- Richter Belmont: From Rondo of Blood and Symphony of the Night, playing more like the latter. Like Julius he can only use traditional Belmont subweapons. He can only whip forward, but to compensate he can use a vast array of Martial Arts, which include his Sliding Kick, Tackle, and Backflip and which he can chain together to perform highly damaging combos. Has the strongest normal attack power of the Belmonts. His theme music is Divine Bloodlines from Rondo of Blood, with elements from The Outcasts / Strange Bloodlines from Symphony of the Night and Bloodlines Bequeathed from Portrait of Ruin. It is available as DLC in the second Music Pack.
- Maria Renard: From Rondo of Blood and Symphony of the Night, playing more like the former. Fights with the mortal incarnations of The Four Gods of the Chinese Zodiac. She can also use the music book, here known as the Hymn. Instead of singing a dissonant tune, however, she sings Bloody Tears. One of the smallest characters, her small hitbox allows her to fit inside areas which cannot normally be entered, and sometimes she can avoid attacks entirely. Her theme music is Slash from Rondo of Blood with elements from the Castlevania Judgment version, and is available as DLC in the second Music Pack.
- Simon Belmont: From Castlevania 1986, fighting much like his original form in 8-bit glory with the addition of a double jump, jump kick and slide. Wields the Vampire Killer. He also has access to the traditional Belmont subweapons. Upgrading his subweapons turns the Vampire Killer into a metal bladed whip instead of his normal one, and upgrading all of them makes it flash. Can throw a fireball out of the whip using a Hadoken motion. His whip has the fastest recovery time of the whip users. His theme music is, obviously, Simon's Theme from Super Castlevania IV and Portrait of Ruin, and is available as DLC in the second Music Pack.
- Fuma Getsu: From the obscure Japanese NES action-RPG Getsu Fuma Den. Wields the Pulse Blade, which is a katana that shoots waves of energy that increase in number when he levels up his subweapons, which are War Drums, Throwing Stars, and Hexplosives (curse bombs). His double jump can also damage enemies he comes in contact with, as can the pose each character makes when you hold Up.
Stages[]
Starting:
- Chapter One: Caught in the Cradle of Decay: Based on the Dark Chapel, Condemned Tower, and Cursed Clock Tower, as well as the underground section of The Lost Village from Dawn of Sorrow. Music is Ruined Castle Corridor from Aria of Sorrow, and the hidden item is the Bell. The boss is Gergoth from Dawn of Sorrow, and his theme music is Into the Dark Night from the same game. Notable items you can obtain here include Combo Boots, Blue Knuckles, and Spiked Boots.
- Chapter Two: Lord of Unseen Strings: Based on the Lost Village, Demon Guest House, and Garden of Madness from Dawn of Sorrow. Music is After Confession from Dawn of Sorrow, and the hidden item is the Crown. The boss is Puppet Master from Dawn of Sorrow, and he shares Into the Dark Night with Gergoth as his theme music. Notable items you can obtain here include the Muramasa and Thief Rings.
- Chapter Three: The End Of Chaos: Based on the Abyss from Dawn of Sorrow and the Skeleton Cave from Order of Ecclesia. Music is PHANTOM OF FEAR, which is an original track, and the hidden item is the Moai. The boss is Menace from Dawn of Sorrow, and his theme music is Piercing Battle Fury from Dawn of Sorrow. Notable items you can obtain here include Chaos Rings, Heaven Swords, and Nebula.
- Chapter Four: Esquisse of Violence: Based on the City of Haze, the Land of Fools, and the Master's Keep from Portrait of Ruin. Music is Gaze Up At The Darkness from Portrait of Ruin, and the hidden item is Goemon. The boss is Brauner from Portrait of Ruin, and his theme music is Esquisse of Violence from the same game. Notable items you can obtain here include the Alucard Sword, Feather Gear, and Gungner.
- Chapter Five: Song of the Unslakable Blade: Based on the Clock Towers from all three DS games (Cursed Clock Tower, Tower Of Death, and Mechanical Tower). Music is Ebony Wings from Order of Ecclesia, and the hidden item is Vic Viper. The boss is Death in his Order of Ecclesia form, and his room is based on the Skeleton Cave from the same game. His theme music is Symphony of Battle from Order of Ecclesia. Notable items you can obtain here include Death's Robe, Death Scythe, and Berserker Mail.
- Chapter Six: Come, Sweet Hour of Death: Based on Ecclesia, Castle Entrance, Library, and Final Approach from Order of Ecclesia. Music is The Colossus from Order of Ecclesia, and the hidden item is Konami Man. The boss is Dracula, using all three of his forms from Symphony of the Night, and he has two themes for his first two phases and his last one: Order of the Demon from Order of Ecclesia, and a reprise of Dance of Illusions taken from Dracula X Chronicles. Notable items you can obtain here include Dracula's Tunic, Simon's Plate, Winged Boots, the Claimh Solais, and the Valmanway (formerly known as the Crissaegrim).
DLC Chapters:
- Chapter Seven: Beauty, Desire, Situation Dire (DLC for 360 version only; available at the start in the PlayStation 3 version): Based on the Sandy Grave from Portrait of Ruin. Music is Hail From The Past from Portrait of Ruin, and the hidden item is Vick 13. The boss is Astarte from Portrait of Ruin, and her theme music is Piercing Silence from the same game. Was released on September 29, 2010. Notable items you can obtain here include the Robe Decollete, Winged Boots, and Miser Rings.
- Chapter Eight: The One Who Is Many: Based on the Underground Caverns, Abandoned Pit, and Catacombs from Symphony of the Night. Music is The Lost Portrait from Symphony of the Night, and the hidden item is the Lucky Cat. The boss is Legion from Symphony of the Night and Portrait of Ruin, and its theme music is Poetic Death, better known as Death's Ballad from Symphony of the Night. Was released on January 12, 2011. Notable items you can obtain here include Simon's Cloak, Apollonian Rings, Artemisian Rings and Globus.
- Chapter Nine: Lord of Flies: Based on the Castle Entrance, Alchemy Laboratory, and Marble Gallery from Symphony of the Night. Music is Castle Dracula from Symphony of the Night, and the hidden item is Twinbee. The boss is Beelzebub from Symphony of the Night, and his theme music is The Horde's Festival, better known as Festival of Servants from Symphony of the Night. Was released on January 19, 2011. Notable items you can obtain here include Alucard Sword +1, Kaiser Knuckle +1, Acerbatus, Philosopher's Stones, and Sonic Boots.
- Chapter Ten: Origins: Based on all the levels from the original Castlevania 1986. Music is Vampire Killer from Castlevania 1986, and the hidden item is an 8-bit Crown. All enemies and bosses are in their original 8-bit sprites, and you can even unlock the original eight-bit music after beating the level. The bosses are R. Phantom Bat, R. Queen Medusa, R. Mummy Man, R. The Creature, R. Grim Reaper, and R. The Count. The first five do not have themes, but upon reaching the staircase to Retro Dracula's room the music changes to Nothing to Lose from the first game. Was released January 26, 2011. Notable items you can obtain here include Retro Gear (Helm, Armor, Boots, and Cloak), Valmanway +1, Dextro Custos, Sinestro Custos, and Claimh Solais +1.
- Chapter Eleven: The Legend of Fuma: Based on the obscure Konami NES game Getsu Fuma Den (Also known as Legend of Getsu Fuma or Legend of the Lunar Wind Demon). Music is Go! Getsu Fuma, and the hidden item is the Facade Card. The boss is Ryukotsuki (literally "Dragon Bone Demon") from Getsu Fuma Den, and his theme music bears his namesake and is also from the same game. Was released February 2, 2011. Notable items you can obtain here include Luminatio, Muramasa +1, Yasutsuna +1, and the Fuma Gear (Helmet, Armor, and Greaves), along with most of the gear listed under Chapter 2 if you play on Normal and Chapter 3 if you play on Hard.
Besides characters and stages, there have also been 2 music packs of five songs each. If you want more information on the music in this game, check out this link.
Harmony Of Despair provides examples of:[]
- Ascended Meme: Every character has 2 quotes they say if they're the ones to land the last hit on the boss. Guess what Richter's are? Yup, you got it: "Die, monster!" and "You don't belong in this world!".
- A lot of the other Narm Charm dialogue is also referenced. If you have not bought the full game, a skit with either Jonathan and Charlotte or Soma and Alucard will play. Alucard says "I'm interested in this.", his original line when asking for something from the Master Librarian. The fans finally got what they wanted, essentially. New voices, same old hilariously bad dialogue.
- Attack of the 50 Foot Whatever: Menace, the boss of the third chapter, and Beelzebub, boss of the ninth chapter.
- Badass Boast: When revived, Shanoa says "Hell could never hold me."
- Big No: This.
- Bragging Rights Reward: The secret items in each stage. Also extends to leaderboars since they only exist to provide a large point bonus.
- Cherry Tapping: Whoever managed to beat Menace with Paper airplanes has too much time on their hands.
- Chest Monster: Mimics are back, and they sometimes show up in place of the brown chests.
- Competitive Balance: On December 20, the game received a large overhaul in both netcode and gameplay. Here's some examples of what was changed.
- Several weapons had their damage outputs and properties strengthened and weakened, respectively. Of note is the Blender nerf. Not only was the Yasutsuna's damage output decreased, but its multiple hit ratio has been drastically reduced, making the Valmanways a much more preferred method. The Valmanways, however, also deliver hits slower, but the rate remains the same. The Alucard Sword and the Muramasa, two largely overlooked weapons in favor of the Blenders, have now been massively buffed in damage output so that people would use them instead of Valmanways and Yasutsunas.
- Subweapons for whip users (and Maria) now require a smaller amount of MP to use, making them much more effective in lieu of the whip.
- Charlotte's Infinite Healing is now impossible to do thanks to an altered hitbox and a higher MP requirement, forcing her to go on the offensive.
- Not entirely impossible. After enough spell grinding and with the right gear, it is still possible, but anyone who manages to pull it off will usually only match the cost, if they don't just barely exceed it, meaning a Charlotte with enough INT can still use Infinite Healing in multiplayer, but at best will only be able to heal herself for 1 or 2 HP at a time outside of potions. Still makes SSJ Charlotte insanely impractical.
- Netcode has been updated so that connections are more accurate, and it is now possible to open the game in the lobby for new players to join. The menus have also been updated in accordance.
- Crisis Crossover: Alucard, Jonathan Morris, Charlotte Aulin, Soma Cruz, and Shanoa are the starting characters. More are planned to be released as DLC.
- Julius Belmont, Yoko Belnades, Maria Renard, Richter Belmont, Simon Belmont, and Getsu Fuhma are currently downloadable.
- Combination Attack: The Dual Crushes from Portrait of Ruin make an encore appearance, with most of them being new to the series. Of special note: pairing up Jonathan and Charlotte is the only way to recreate the Thousand Blades attack, while having Alucard and Soma initiate a Dual Crush results in none other than Dracula's Demonic Megiddo (albeit on a smaller scale). While previously they were Awesome but Impractical due to their large MP cost but far lower damage than their appearance would suggest, they've been greatly improved in the update, both in damage and lowered MP cost, making them a viable option to use against bosses.
- Death Is Cheap: In multiplayer, you can still go around as a skeleton after you're killed (and continue doing so), meaning the game won't end until the last player actually dies. However, there are a few problems with being a skeleton: not only are you weak, limited in mobility, can't interact with switches or treasure chests or get the latter's contents and can only attack through throwing your bones, but each time you get killed as a skeleton, three minutes are removed from the timer and you respawn wherever you were killed, which might be halfway across the level if you tried following another player who was making their way to a Water Of Life and got hit by a stray attack in the progress. But still ...
- Can also be taken literally, since Death moves around the most out of any boss and is thus generally the hardest boss to not to get hit by and to kill the fastest.
- And he tours outside of the boss room to attack players while they're on their way to him! Death Is Cheap indeed, although not cheap enough to have Collision Damage outside of his room or spam his scythes without considerable startup.
- Being reduced to a skeleton is not as much of a handicap anymore thanks to the update, which gave them the ability to crouch and slide, meaning the only general action they don't have access to is jump kicks... but then again, Charlotte and Yoko don't have them either. Any skeletonized players are also now automatically revived when someone opens the boss chest, meaning they won't be screwed out of a possibly rare item if nobody has any leftover Waters of Life after the bossfight.
- Can also be taken literally, since Death moves around the most out of any boss and is thus generally the hardest boss to not to get hit by and to kill the fastest.
- Degraded Boss: Among others, Dullahan has been reduced to a powerful enemy.
- Gergoth has been reduced from a strong candidate for That One Boss to an easy first boss. (He can still crush newbies pretty easily, though. So don't expect to not be killed the first several times you go through Chapter 1!)
- Denial of Diagonal Attack: Semi-averted by some characters, but Julius Belmont averts the trope fully, in the style of Super Castlevania IV. Plus, he can whip-swing.
- Distracted by the Sexy: Dracula's final form has a special heart attack which can brainwash female characters if it hits them: against males, it just does large amounts of damage. Charmed females can hit other players and be hit by other players, and killing a charmed player counts as an achievement, but it isn't particularly smart to do it otherwise, since revive items are scarce and it wears off on its own.
- Funnily enough, when Charlotte snaps out of the charm, she says "What a jerk!"
- Astarte can do the same thing, except for males. And since the majority of the characters are male, this would pose a problem if only it were less easily telegraphed and the fact that you can dodge it with relative ease if you're either outside the boss door or if you time your jump right and you're right on top of her while doing so.
- It should be noted that killing a charmed player just accelerates their death, as a charmed player isn't likely to survive the rest of the battle. So if you have a Water of Life, it'll simply be quicker to kill them yourself and then bring them back.
- In single-player, being charmed just renders you unable to do anything for a fairly long time. Seeing as Dracula and Astarte can both dish out a lot of damage... yeah, the previous statement isn't far off the mark.
- If a player holds Up as Shanoa to absorb a glyph too long, she lets out a sarcastic huff as if the player is just trying to Male Gaze at her epic Sexy Backless Outfit.
- Charlotte on the other hand will twirl and pose for the camera, saying "you like that?"
- Funnily enough, when Charlotte snaps out of the charm, she says "What a jerk!"
- Dungeon Bypass: Soma can use a combination of moving platforms, a tall vertical wall, Puppet Master soul, and a well-timed double jump to use the game's collision detection against itself and glitch his way through a solid ceiling to reach the other side of a normally one-way door and bypass a very large part of the otherwise marathon-length chapter 10. He can then, of course, flip the switch next to the door and let the rest of the team join in on the fun.
- Grandfather Paradox: Soma (Dracula's reincarnation) is able to gain dominance on Dracula's soul. It's a damn good thing the game has no story.
- They take it Up to Eleven; he can do the same thing to the 8-Bit Retro Count!
- Guest Fighter: Getsu Fuma.
- Hey, It's That Voice!: Pretty much all of the previous VAs reprised their roles from past 'Vanias, both in Japanese and English. In some cases, the old voices from the Symphony era stepped in once again.
- Soma is once again played by Hikaru Midorikawa in Japanese. His first-ever English voice (Erik Davies) is Hazama.
- Yuri Lowenthal and Ryotaro Okiayu both reprise their roles as Alucard.
- Michelle Ruff and Houko Kuwashima return to voice Shanoa.
- Likewise, Liam O'Brien and Takahiro Sakurai return to voice Jonathan.
- Same with Charlotte, with Melissa Fahn and Yumi Kakazu returning.
- Even some of the enemies have voices too. Persephone (the maid) is voiced by Stephanie Sheh in English and Houko Kuwashima in Japanese, who also voices the Succubus.
- Frozen Shade and Aliorumnas (Salem Witch) are both voiced by Ao Takahashi in English and Japanese, who also voices the Witch in both languages, the Lerajies in Japanese, Yoko, and Astarte.
- Wendee Lee returns to voice the Succubus in English.
- The Lerajie is voiced by Tara Platt in English.
- As for the bosses, the Puppet Master gets two new voices. In English he is voiced by Doug Stone, better known as Psycho Mantis and Valkenhayn, while is Japanese he is voiced by Kiyoyuki Yanada, who also voices Richter.
- Brauner and Astarte have their voice clips carried over and remastered from their debut in Portrait of Ruin in both English and Japanese. In English, Brauner is Jamieson Price and Astarte is Karen Strassman. In Japanese, Brauner is voiced by Hisao Egawa and Astarte is voiced by Ao Takahashi.
- Masaharu Sato reprises his role as Death from Symphony, while in English his role is once again recast, this time to newcomer Joe J. Thomas.
- And finally Dracula is reprised by Patrick Seitz and Norio Wakamoto.
- As for the DLC characters, Tetsu Inada returns to voice Julius. His first-ever English voice actor is David Lodge, who you may recognize as the voice of Kenpachi and Jiraiya.
- Yoko is voiced by Julie Ann Taylor.
- David Vincent reprises his role as Richter from the Rondo of Blood remake The Dracula X Chronicles.
- Maria is reprised in English by Philece Sampler from Judgment. In Japanese she gets Darrin'd from Chisa Yokoyama to Chiwa Saitou.
- Idiot Ball: There are a couple of weapons available for Alucard and Soma, the Yasutsuna and the Valmanway, that allow you to attack while moving, because they don't have an attack animation — they just make some slashing effects happen in front of the character. Granted, the Yasutsuna only works that way when used by Alucard, but the Valmanway works the same for both. While seasoned players will with no doubt look at this and think they can get many attacks in while still remaining agile, the far more common response is that people just forget to dodge entirely, because they can deal damage as fast as they can mash the attack button(s). If it weren't for this, they'd be straight up in Game Breaker territory.
- Smarter players also tend to pair the said weapons with Berserker Mail, which doubles both the damage you deal and take, since this is a significant boost to otherwise low damage one of the said weapons does per hit: since not getting hit at all is vastly preferable both in regards of getting higher scores and better items from bosses, the doubled damage isn't as much of a handicap as it'd seem.
- Infinity+1 Sword: Well, you can't get much more literal than having better versions of best weapons of several weapon classes with better stats that are just named <original name>+1, can you?
- Kaizo Trap: In chapter 9, if some of Beelzebub's flies are still around after its defeat, they can still kill you.
- As can R.The Count's projectile spirals if you kill him while he's in middle of using one, but it's a lot less likely to happen since you're generally too busy evading it to attack him then.
- Large Ham: The Puppet Master ("YOU, TOO, SHALL BE MY PUPPET!") and Brauner ("THIS...IS ART!!!").
- The former can become very irritating due to its boss status, played every time you start that scenario. Noticeable in that he's the only boss with an intro like that.
- Brauner's always been a Large Ham.
- Leeroy Jenkins: Any player that charges into a boss room without waiting for everyone else, which can be devastating if said boss is the Puppet Master.
- Lethal Joke Character: The 8-bit characters may initially seem like this, but both of them possess strength comparable to other characters:
- Simon's whip ends up being just as strong as Richter's with length comparable to all other whip users, and he attacks the fastest out of all whip users in the game as well as having an always-available ranged attack, and he can use all the same subweapons as well.
- Meanwhile, Fuma's sword swing has the shortest range in the game, but the flames that shoot out with every swing give him the largest normal attack coverage in the entire game, and at pointblank range, all 3 of them hit the enemy along with the blade, giving him respectable damage output. His unique subweapons also have plenty of uses and include a powerful piercing attack, a powerful bomb that spreads in 5 directions when it explodes, and a rapidly-moving wall of shurikens for large enemies or getting rid of hard to hit small ones in his way. His taunt can also cause minor damage to enemies right above him and his Double Jump also damages anything he comes in contact with, which may end up saving the day, especially when fighting the boss from his own game. And finally, both of them are smaller targets than the other characters, meaning they'll have an easier time avoiding some attacks.
- Level Grinding: Subverted; unlike the Metroidvania-style games, no traditional form of leveling is involved. That being said, all subweapons get stronger with either repeated use or collecting more copies of them, which in turn increases that character's base stats, and in Charlotte's case, upgrades the range and coverage of her normal attack.
- Luck Stat: Perhaps the most interesting aspect of this game compared to other 'Vanias. Finally, Konami has officially revealed that Luck DOES actually affect the rare drops you get...if you have half of a team using luck builds. Also, the person with the highest luck needs to kill the boss and open the chest.
- Marth Debuted in Smash Bros: With the worldwide release of Getsu Fuma and his stage, this is the first time he appears in any (non-card) game outside of Japan.
- Mega Manning: Soma Cruz, Charlotte Aulin, and Shanoa can all do this.
- Menu Time Lockout: Oh so painfully averted. Once that 30-minute timer starts, there is absolutely no way to stop it. Whether it's pausing, fiddling with your inventory at the Grimoire, everything keeps going in real time. Yes, that means the gameplay keeps going, so if you're pausing, you'd best make sure no enemies are nearby.
- Metroidvania: Subverted; even though the rooms are laid out like previous 2D Castlevania titles, they now play out as a single joined stage, where enemies can travel and attack between rooms. Think of it as a perfect mixture of Classicvania and Metroidvania.
- Nerf: See Competitive Balance.
- Nintendo Hard: Limited healing items? Alucard's Soul Steal not as effective as it was before? No save points that give full HP/MP mid stage? A 30-minute time limit for your exploration of each stage?!? Yeah, this is going to suck for some people.
- Not to mention, Dracula... Oh good Lord, Dracula and his triangles of death...
- You mean skittle-doom?
- Hard mode is dubbed by some fans as Ultra Hard Rape Mode for a reason.
- Normal mode, on the other hand, is not. Go figure.
- Chapter 10, based on the entire original Castlevania, is this regardless of difficulty. The map is huge, requiring a lot of time to get through (unless a Soma glitches their way through the ceiling in the room with moving platforms and opens the door for the rest of the team, allowing them to bypass around 60% of the level), treasure chests are in difficult to reach places (including the blue ones that have the Water of Life in multiplayer), and both of Retro Dracula's forms can have new insane attack patterns and tricks up their sleeves.
- Hard Chapter 11 has topped Chapter 10 in terms of difficulty. First, you have to beat all 3 minibosses before fighting the actual boss, which takes quite a while and will cost you a lot of health (and Super Potions) and each one you defeat powers up the other 2 and makes their attacks harder to avoid. Then, when you get to the boss and kill his first and second forms, he turns into a giant dragon skeleton...vthing that suddenly starts filling the screen with fireballs that can either curse, poison, or petrify you. Oh, and you can't hit him multiple times, either. You have to wait until his heart is exposed, and even then you only have a limited window of time to attack. Ridiculous.
- Not to mention, Dracula... Oh good Lord, Dracula and his triangles of death...
- No Fair Cheating: On Hard Chapters 6 and 10, both Draculas have measures to prevent idling at the boss door. Normal Dracula will summon pillars of fire outside the door if he detects someone standing near the entrance after transforming into his second form. Retro Dracula, however, is less forgiving. If he detects someone outside the door and the one person fighting him is dead, he summons a HUGE fire spiral that goes across the whole stage and cannot be dodged or avoided. And it goes on forever and will kill you in 3 hits.
- Death does this as well, but to a lesser extent. He just summons random scythes around the boss area.
- Nostalgia Level: The recently-released Chapter 9 is a replica of the first few areas from Symphony of the Night.
- Chapter 8 as well. It's a replica of the Catacombs, Abandoned Mine, and Underground Caverns.
- Chapter 10 is a replica of all of the levels of the very first Castlevania. So it's essentially the whole game in a single level, complete with being in 8-bit.
- And along with it, Simon, who's a nostalgia character.
- No Plot, No Problem: Some of the playable characters lives are centuries apart, one is the reincarnation of one of the boss (who he can absorb the soul of). Nobody cares.
- One-Winged Angel: Dracula, as always. The battle against him features him using all three of his Symphony of the Night forms.
- Panty Shot: Just like in Portrait of Ruin, Vacuum + Charlotte = Fun. However, due to the effects (you're frozen for a few seconds), this can make playing as Charlotte in the second level a bit more difficult if your initial spawn is in the "right" place.
- Also works with Yoko.
- Pink Girl, Blue Boy: Upon death in multiplayer, guys get tombstones with moss, girls get wooden crosses with floral wreaths.
- Both get ornate Japanese gravestones with Ghost Lights flying around them if they die enough times, Getsu gets them by default.
- Poison Mushroom: There are some food items that poison you if you pick them up, so you have to pay close attention to what you're grabbing.
- Prop Recycling: Nearly all of the sprite art and quite a few of the sound effects/voices are recycled from previous Castlevania games (especially the 3 Nintendo DS iterations).
- Randomly Drops: In full force here. What's more, hacking the game has revealed that in order to reduce the likelihood of getting tons of second-best items from the boss chests (as opposed to the best items, which are generally the ones you'd really want), it's ultimately beneficial to reduce your luck as low as possible, which goes against all video game logic ever established: to be fair, in order to be more likely to get the best items from boss chests, you'll instead need to just be able to play the game well by finishing the stage quickly and taking no damage. However, when you are with multiple people, the likelihood of getting good items goes up (and having a higher luck stat can get you better treasures than everyone else).
- Shanoa's weapon glyphs are only found in Boss treasure chests, and it's random if you get one or not. Be ready for a lot of frustration if you're not happy with the default rapier...
- Johnathan's subweapon drops are random. Note that he doesn't improve unless he gets more subweapons.
- Charlotte's spells are both acquired and upgraded through a random-drop based system, with the random element shifted from whether you get the spell you're looking for or something else entirely to whether the enemy you get the spell from feels like using the attack in question, and whether you need to absorb 1 or 1000 of their projectiles in question to ultimately learn or upgrade the spell. Like Johnathan, she doesn't improve unless she gets more spells.
- The Dev Team Thinks of Everything: In Chapter 9, after getting across the drawbridge, there is a platform next to the Dullahan. If you attack it, it reveals a secret area with a green chest. This area is the entrance to the Underground Prison in the Saturn version of Symphony of the Night.
- They also remembered the Sword Brothers glitch where you can get out of the castle and go beyond the boundaries, letting you get over 400% map completion. Now you can do what you always dreamed: jump on the entrance walls and take a shortcut to the boss!
- The Voiceless: Simon and Fuma do not speak at all, as they are 8-bit.
- Timed Mission: Each level has a time limit of 30 minutes. For the longer and more linear levels (Chapters 6 and 10 come to mind), this is actually very unforgiving.
- Time Travel: Shanoa's game takes place sometime in the 1800s, Jonathan and Charlotte are from 1944, and Soma is from 2035, so it kinda goes without saying. Alucard's year of origin isn't stated, but it doesn't really matter much, since he's effectively immortal.
- By the way, Julius and Yoko are from 2035 as well, and Richter and Maria come from 1792.
- The justification is that these are living incarnations of a book chronicle of Castlevania. Someone wrote down what all of these heroes and villains did in a magic book; and then the characters inside the book came to life and teamed up to take the other side down.
- By the way, Julius and Yoko are from 2035 as well, and Richter and Maria come from 1792.
- Took a Level In Badass: "Psshh. Retro Dracula? Like this is going to be any kind of challen-Did he just fire underarching fireballs? Did he just Back Dash into me? DID HE JUST UNLEASH Bullet Hell AGAINST ME?! DID HE JUST CHARGE AT ME WHILE FLYING?!"
- You Fail Physics Forever: There is a glitch on Chapter 10 with Soma involving Puppet Master which involves going into the elevator room after what is technically stage 2 of the original Castlevania, throwing the puppet at the right time, then jump kicking at the right time. You will begin floating upward and towards the clock tower room, at which point if you jump at the right time you warp through the ceiling into it, essentially skipping half of the level. Good riddance considering the godawful drop pool.
- Richter can do the same thing with his Spin Kick.
- And now so can Shanoa, and any character with a drop kick, for that matter. It's easier to do with Soma and Richter, though.