![]() Unlike most RPGs, you stick with the same three characters throughout. Nothing about Bug Fables is particularly challenging (unless you want it to be), but it makes you want to keep pushing onward, exploring and uncovering the mysteries that Bugaria has to offer. It has a lot of heart, interesting characters, and straightforward action that has a knack for keeping you engrossed. With Bug Fables, they want to remind you of how wonderful the Thousand-Year Door was, however, they also want to bring you a charming RPG that is just as much about the fundamental systems as it is about its story. Yes, it is similar to Paper Mario, but Moonsprout Games want it to be. The premise and mechanics don’t appear to be anything new, but after playing for ten minutes I was wrong to judge, and my initial impressions were blasted out the water. Visually, it is very similar, and it features insects in fairly standard designed environments, doing typical RPG things in a typical RPG environment. Watch the trailer and it looks like a poor man’s Paper Mario and the Thousand-Year Door. It’s easy to write off a game like Bug Fables: The Everlasting Sapling before you’ve even played it. ![]()
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