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Feda: The Emblem of Justice

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Feda: The Emblem of Justice

Oct 28, 1994

Main game

3.50 average rating based on 8 ratings

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In a fantasy world, a soldier from the imperial forces deserts after witnessing the massacre of innocent villagers by his unit. He is sent to jail to be executed, but manages to escape with the help of two former unit colleagues. The group flees through the country-side, while being pursued by imperial soldiers. On their way, they join forces with other rebels to fight against the enemy, while uncovering hidden secrets and evil plots by the Empire. Feda: Emblem of Justice is a strategy RPG similar to Shining Force and other titles with preset characters and linear gameplay. The player … More
In a fantasy world, a soldier from the imperial forces deserts after witnessing the massacre of innocent villagers by his unit. He is sent to jail to be executed, but manages to escape with the help of two former unit colleagues. The group flees through the country-side, while being pursued by imperial soldiers. On their way, they join forces with other rebels to fight against the enemy, while uncovering hidden secrets and evil plots by the Empire. Feda: Emblem of Justice is a strategy RPG similar to Shining Force and other titles with preset characters and linear gameplay. The player commands a party of varying size and characters with diverse skills. In the main battle sections, the player and the CPU-controlled enemy take turns moving the troops and giving orders. A menu at the bottom of the screen shows all the possible actions, where soldiers can defend, move, attack, or use an inventory item on each turn. The range of their movements and weapons vary according to their nature. A crossbow character can shoot from the back, while most sword and knife users have to be adjacent to their targets. Magic offensive powers have different ranges as well, reaching enemies that are far away from the attacking character. Health points can be recovered by eating rations or by magic, where a healer can restore points to several characters at once. Each party member has separate health and magic points, as well as other statistics like defense and attack power. They receive experience points after slaying an enemy or casting a spell, and extra points at the end of the battle. Their skills increase after surpassing 100 points. The map screen shows the party and groups of enemies traveling through the landscape in turns. The menu has options for moving the group or camping. In the encampment, one of the characters around the fire pit saves the game, while another inside the tent provides system options to change the interface color, adjust sound volume and rename the party members. In some locations like temples, villages and towns, the party has to explore the place and talk to the citizens to move on to the next section. In later battles, the player has to make a moral choice about attacking mutated humans. At the end of each battle, the party is assigned a dark or light emblem, and certain party members choose to leave or stay in the group based on its alignment. Less
Developers
Max Entertainment
Publishers
Yanoman
Platforms
Super Famicom
Genres
Role-playing (RPG), Strategy
Themes
Fantasy
Release Dates
Oct 28, 1994 Full Release (Japan)
Super Famicom
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User Stats
38
In Collection
9
Wish Listed
0
Playing
18
Backlogged
How Long Is Feda: The Emblem of Justice?
Main + extras: 11.5 hours
Total completions: 1
Chovus
Chovus gave Jan 8, 2021
Chovus gave Jan 8, 2021
Life of Brian, Animal Crossing Edition
This review is for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System version

Feda the Emblem of Justice, for SNES

Rating: 7.8/10; Good

Recommended for strategy rpg fans

Feda is a strategy rpg that follows the hero Brian as he revolts against a tyrannical empire. The opening says that the empire is ruled by non-humans and that humans are subjugated, but all kinds of anthropomorphic people appear on both sides. Most of the characters in the game are some kind of humanoid animal; wolf, fox, dog, cat, ox, insect, lizard, dragon, bird, horse, while there are also actual animals, monsters, undead and robots. And flying machines and laser cannons. Characters fight with medieval era weapons and armor though. That whole sci fi angle is not explored at all and feels out of place.

Battles take place on small maps; small in both playable area and scale. If not for the fact that some tiles give bonuses and penalties to stats as well as restrict movement, I would consider this more of a tactical rpg. As it stands, the game falls somewhere between Fire Emblem and Final Fantasy Tactics. All of your characters are named with personality and things to say when you talk in camp, but the dialogue only changes each …

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Feda the Emblem of Justice, for SNES

Rating: 7.8/10; Good

Recommended for strategy rpg fans

Feda is a strategy rpg that follows the hero Brian as he revolts against a tyrannical empire. The opening says that the empire is ruled by non-humans and that humans are subjugated, but all kinds of anthropomorphic people appear on both sides. Most of the characters in the game are some kind of humanoid animal; wolf, fox, dog, cat, ox, insect, lizard, dragon, bird, horse, while there are also actual animals, monsters, undead and robots. And flying machines and laser cannons. Characters fight with medieval era weapons and armor though. That whole sci fi angle is not explored at all and feels out of place.

Battles take place on small maps; small in both playable area and scale. If not for the fact that some tiles give bonuses and penalties to stats as well as restrict movement, I would consider this more of a tactical rpg. As it stands, the game falls somewhere between Fire Emblem and Final Fantasy Tactics. All of your characters are named with personality and things to say when you talk in camp, but the dialogue only changes each chapter rather than after each battle. If either of the 2 main characters die the game ends, while everyone else becomes captured by the enemy if they fall in battle, which causes them to miss out on xp rewards for winning battles and makes you do a rescue mission if you want them back. Missions come with objectives that are loosely mentioned in dialogue at the start but there is no screen of any kind to remind you. These objectives are fairly simple and tend to be kill all enemies, only kill certain enemies, hold out for X turns or move 1 or all of your characters across the map. You can always win by killing everything and the game's morality system compares how many enemies you have killed to missions completed. So if you want to follow the Law path you have to complete objectives without killing too many enemies, while if you want to be Chaos it is as simple as butchering as many as possible. Attacks and killing blows grant xp, and kills grant money so the battles can be more difficult if you follow Law. There are also characters that only join if you match their alignment, and who will leave if you change to the opposing.

In battles each side takes turns moving 1 unit at a time, which is a refreshing change of pace from the usual binary turn system where all units on 1 side move before the enemy gets to do anything. This mechanic creates a number of tactical considerations that encourage the player to think several moves ahead. You get to move first and your characters can act in any order. The enemy can also choose any of their units to move, and are pretty good at prioritizing those that can attack and healers if healing is needed. There can be some cat and mouse situations where you want to hold off on attacking or charging in until a certain enemy ends its turn. Enemies tend to prioritize attacking the main characters but I have seen them go after wounded units to finish them off. Moving a unit shows every tile they can move to and you can freely move them around and cancel until you confirm. Attacking ends the unit's turn so you can charge into battle to attack but not hit and run in the same turn. Flanking has no effect and there are no counterattacks, but there are those time wasting unskipable cutscenes for every attack and spell. You can look at enemy stats but there is no way to tell their movement and attack range outside of practice. The game is not difficult though so you will not need to use optimal tactics. Units can freely swap weapons on their turn so you can carry both short and long range weapons. Items have simple descriptions and pictures showing what they are, which are greyed out at shops if the selected unit can't equip it. Swapping stuff between characters can be done in battle or by using the storage in camp, but characters cannot be without a weapon so you will not be able to swipe the gear of your allies unless you have spare stuff to trade them. Outside battles are typical jrpg towns to explore, which is pretty much what the camp is too, and a Mario Bros 3 style overworld where each day you can move to an adjacent location. The very interesting thing about the world map is enemy armies and garrisons are visible and can move around. Not only can you see the enemies coming but some battles can be avoided if you move around the map in certain ways.

Feda is an easy game for the most part but still provides compelling story, characters, mechanics and pretty much everything you want from a strategy rpg. The highlight of the game is the way units on both sides alternate turns in battle while the only things going against the game are some minor user unfriendly features and missed opportunity to flesh out the story and setting. I personally could have done without all the animal people, or at least include something in the story akin to racial tension; but no one in the game seems to care, or even acknowledge, what kind of animal another is. Might as well have everyone be human then, or humans wearing silly animal masks.

Pro

  • Alternating unit turns
  • Great tactical combat
  • World map can be used to avoid or go after battles
  • Decent story, dialogue and characters

Con

  • Dialogue does not pause to wait for player input
  • No objectives screen or battle map
  • Limited party size
  • No descriptions for spells
  • Trading items between characters can only be done during battle (and costing a turn) or using the storage in camp
  • Unskipable battle cutscenes
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Chovus
Chovus updated their status Nov 24, 2020
Chovus updated their status Nov 24, 2020

Beat with highest law reputation; Fedein. Looks like an angel. I did not know about reputation when I started and decided to beat each mission with optimal tactics. The 1st mission was to flee but I killed everyone and became phantom. After that completing the mission objectives was tactically superior and my reputation went up to Fedein. I assumed it was a simple matter of winning by completing objectives vs killing everything. So I started killing as many as possible to farm as much xp and money as possible, only leaving 1 or 2 alive and winning by completing objectives. This worked well for a while until my reputation started to drop. I completely missed an optional path that skips a few battles and ended up having to slaughter them all. My reputation kept dropping until it was at neutral. The law characters were complaining and I was worried I would drop into chaos and lose them. I was using most of them in my battle team and they were much higher level than the neutrals I was not using. I started minimizing kills, especially for weaker enemies that would not give much xp anyway and my reputation slowly climbed …

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Beat with highest law reputation; Fedein. Looks like an angel. I did not know about reputation when I started and decided to beat each mission with optimal tactics. The 1st mission was to flee but I killed everyone and became phantom. After that completing the mission objectives was tactically superior and my reputation went up to Fedein. I assumed it was a simple matter of winning by completing objectives vs killing everything. So I started killing as many as possible to farm as much xp and money as possible, only leaving 1 or 2 alive and winning by completing objectives. This worked well for a while until my reputation started to drop. I completely missed an optional path that skips a few battles and ended up having to slaughter them all. My reputation kept dropping until it was at neutral. The law characters were complaining and I was worried I would drop into chaos and lose them. I was using most of them in my battle team and they were much higher level than the neutrals I was not using. I started minimizing kills, especially for weaker enemies that would not give much xp anyway and my reputation slowly climbed back up. In some missions I had to kill quite a few enemies to avoid my own losses, and my reputation dropped to valkyrie a couple times.

The early game was ridiculously easy. I never had to use healing items or upgrade weapons. Brian and Ain used the starting short swords for most of the game until I found some free upgrades. I bought the middle bow for the archer, which was worth it because it increased her range. In late game I bought the best bow and gun, the best spear for Shane (which had as much range as the bows and guns and for some reason only he could use) and blew the rest on blade resist armor for 8 out of 10 characters. I had enough money before the final boss to buy some upgrades but pressed to the end instead because I would have had to fight a generic battle and risk dropping to valkyrie again. Game got much harder with time. Brian, Ain and Shisima were the front line tanks using their special attacks to burn down enemies. Ain especially was such a tank that in the final battle I sent him by himself to offtank several enemies. I had 2 centaur cavalry and 3 fliers that had great mobility but not great damage. They were good for killing generic enemies but not vs bosses. Raven and Dora hung back with ranged attacks and I had to prevent enemies from being able to attack them. Raven got the killing blow on the final boss with his special that did more than twice the damage of Brian and Shisima, while everyone without specials was hitting for pitiful damage. I used the mage and a healer until replacing them with more offensive characters.

The translation was terrible but I could understand the story. Might want to see if there is a better English patch if I play again. The rom also ran terribly on my PSP; I had to load state every few minutes or the emulator would slow to a crawl. Overall very good game. I especially liked the way the turns switch back and forth between you and the enemies between each move, which is a nice change of pace from the usual move everyone in one go of Fire Emblem.

7.8/10

End stats:

Brian: level 55 with executor and blade resist.

Ain: level 54 with doom edge and blade resist.

Shishima: level 54 with calamity edge and blade resist.

Shane: level 53 with best spear and blade resist.

Raven: level 52 with best gun.

Jeda: level 51 with trident and blade resist.

Meraneus: level 50 with trident and blade resist.

Chris: level 50 with chrome lance, javelin and blade resist.

Jenny: level 49 with chrome lance, javelin and blade resist.

Dora: level 49 with best bow.

Not in party: El 44, Aria 40, Ellis 35, Lois 35, Tobikage 38, Arby 34, Dan 36, Richard 42, Shim 38, Conolly 40.

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