In the lead-up to Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes , the spiritual successor to Suikoden , fans were expecting a lot of things: 100+ recruitable characters, turn-based battles, and a sprawling political drama. What they likely weren't expecting was a 2.5D action-platformer about municipal bureaucracy.
But look closer. The writers used this simplicity to bake in world-building. The characters don’t just want materials; they want to open a fishing hole because they miss the ocean, or build a clock tower to remember a lost spouse. The monotony of the quests mirrors the monotony of actual reconstruction. In Hundred Heroes , you’ll recruit the stoic knight and the magical prodigy. In Rising , you help the potter find his favorite clay. Eiyuden Chronicle Rising
The game answers by letting you build a town, brick by brick, literally erasing the ruins. If you played Rising as a frantic sprint to get the "save data bonuses" for Hundred Heroes (the free town hall statue, the extra party member), you missed the point. You treated the journey like a loading screen. In the lead-up to Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes