3×3 Eyes: Seima Kourinden is a SNES RPG, in Japanese, based on the story of the manga series 3×3 Eyes.
Yakumo's story
Yakumo's father disappeared in Tibet a few years ago. He was looking for a people of 3-eyed and immortal people. Because his father disappeared, he works in a gay bar and helps out there. Then he meets Pai, the last girl of the triangular people. From now on, Yakumo tries to protect himself.
3×3 eyes as an RPG
The game itself appeared to have been fully translated to Japanese Disney. It's an RPG adaptation. You start in a city, roam through dungeons and come first to explore dungeons again. Your goal is to get 5 Divine Keys that have been scattered around the world.
The game design
The story of 3×3 Eyes: Seima Kourinden is conveyed by the characters you meet. Regarding the setting, you start in Hong Kong, travel to Athens, to Mexico and finally to Tibet. Of course, the journey then goes back again. You visit different temples on your journey, collect items and let the characters you meet open the dungeons.
The dungeons in 3×3 Eyes: Seima Kourinden
The dungeons are square and go in different directions. On each floor you will find a treasure chest and along the way you will encounter monsters in random battles.
The combat system
3×3 Eyes: Seima Kourinden is a turn-based combat system that is controlled via the menu. From there you want to launch your attacks, use items or cast magic. In the dungeons encountered mostly the same monsters. It the second half of the game we encounter new monster types. There are small cutscenes between hits. The music doesn't really stand out.
Conclusion on 3×3 Eyes: Seima Kourinden
With Japanese, this game is an older RPG, but it doesn't particularly stand out either. The combat system from the NES-Area is generally known, as is the case with other games of the same type. It's not all that varied, but there are definitely worse games. In this sense, the game is particularly recommended for hard-core RPG players who can speak Japanese or fans of the manga series 3×3 eyes.
The publisher of the game was Nova Games.
The game was a little less good for the SNES freaks