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Forums - Nintendo - O Fragile, Where Art Thou?

A long time ago I saw a trailer for the upcoming Fragile for Wii. I fell in love, and so did my Wii. This was what I had been waiting for, I knew it.

Months passed by and my desire grew stronger. O Fragile, when cometh thou?

Then it hit Japan, and...disappeared into the ether...or something...

 

The point is, I really, really want this game, but the question is, will it ever leave Japanese shores? Or is continuing learning Japanese my only option?

 

 

(This is my first time creating a thread, please don't hurt me if I mess up )



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It's gone.



Well IGN said that a publisher would probably be willing to pick it up. It just might take a while. In the mean time I recommend looking forward to:

Muramasa: The Demon Blade
Tales of Graces
Arc Rise Fantasia
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: The Crystal Bearers
Kizuna



"Pier was a chef, a gifted and respected chef who made millions selling his dishes to the residents of New York City and Boston, he even had a famous jingle playing in those cities that everyone knew by heart. He also had a restaurant in Los Angeles, but not expecting LA to have such a massive population he only used his name on that restaurant and left it to his least capable and cheapest chefs. While his New York restaurant sold kobe beef for $100 and his Boston restaurant sold lobster for $50, his LA restaurant sold cheap hotdogs for $30. Initially these hot dogs sold fairly well because residents of los angeles were starving for good food and hoped that the famous name would denote a high quality, but most were disappointed with what they ate. Seeing the success of his cheap hot dogs in LA, Pier thought "why bother giving Los Angeles quality meats when I can oversell them on cheap hotdogs forever, and since I don't care about the product anyways, why bother advertising them? So Pier continued to only sell cheap hotdogs in LA and was surprised to see that they no longer sold. Pier's conclusion? Residents of Los Angeles don't like food."

"The so-called "hardcore" gamer is a marketing brainwashed, innovation shunting, self-righteous idiot who pays videogame makers far too much money than what is delivered."

griffinA said:
Well IGN said that a publisher would probably be willing to pick it up. It just might take a while. In the mean time I recommend looking forward to:

Muramasa: The Demon Blade
Tales of Graces
Arc Rise Fantasia
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: The Crystal Bearers
Kizuna

 

I guess these will keep me busy for a while...now I just have to wait for them to be released XD



Yeah I really wanted to enjoy this game and give it my money. I don't think it's going to pick up a publisher unless we start purchasing more jrpgs.



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I really want this game as well, it's a pity that it hasn't been picked up and brought over yet.

Hopefully someday!



Judging by your collection you might also be interested in:

Silent Hill: Shattered Memories
Cursed Mountain
Resident Evil: Darkside Chronicles
Spectrobes: Origins
Valhalla Knights: Eldar Saga
Dragon Quest X



"Pier was a chef, a gifted and respected chef who made millions selling his dishes to the residents of New York City and Boston, he even had a famous jingle playing in those cities that everyone knew by heart. He also had a restaurant in Los Angeles, but not expecting LA to have such a massive population he only used his name on that restaurant and left it to his least capable and cheapest chefs. While his New York restaurant sold kobe beef for $100 and his Boston restaurant sold lobster for $50, his LA restaurant sold cheap hotdogs for $30. Initially these hot dogs sold fairly well because residents of los angeles were starving for good food and hoped that the famous name would denote a high quality, but most were disappointed with what they ate. Seeing the success of his cheap hot dogs in LA, Pier thought "why bother giving Los Angeles quality meats when I can oversell them on cheap hotdogs forever, and since I don't care about the product anyways, why bother advertising them? So Pier continued to only sell cheap hotdogs in LA and was surprised to see that they no longer sold. Pier's conclusion? Residents of Los Angeles don't like food."

"The so-called "hardcore" gamer is a marketing brainwashed, innovation shunting, self-righteous idiot who pays videogame makers far too much money than what is delivered."

Soriku said:
Baten Kaitos was another game by tri-Crescendo (and Monolith Soft...) came out 11 months after it release in JP.

Origins came out 7 months in NA after JP though.

So far Fragile's been out for 3 months. I just hope it's picked up soon so it can be released at least next year.

Or, heck, they can keep the JP VA and just put subs and stuff and it'd take much faster. Plus the JP VA is good enough.

 

I would love if they kept the original VA! That would save both time and money too.



griffinA said:
Judging by your collection you might also be interested in:

Silent Hill: Shattered Memories
Cursed Mountain
Resident Evil: Darkside Chronicles
Spectrobes: Origins
Valhalla Knights: Eldar Saga
Dragon Quest X

 

Are you a salesman?

Anyway, thanks for the tip.



Just doing my job to get third-party games to sell more on wii



"Pier was a chef, a gifted and respected chef who made millions selling his dishes to the residents of New York City and Boston, he even had a famous jingle playing in those cities that everyone knew by heart. He also had a restaurant in Los Angeles, but not expecting LA to have such a massive population he only used his name on that restaurant and left it to his least capable and cheapest chefs. While his New York restaurant sold kobe beef for $100 and his Boston restaurant sold lobster for $50, his LA restaurant sold cheap hotdogs for $30. Initially these hot dogs sold fairly well because residents of los angeles were starving for good food and hoped that the famous name would denote a high quality, but most were disappointed with what they ate. Seeing the success of his cheap hot dogs in LA, Pier thought "why bother giving Los Angeles quality meats when I can oversell them on cheap hotdogs forever, and since I don't care about the product anyways, why bother advertising them? So Pier continued to only sell cheap hotdogs in LA and was surprised to see that they no longer sold. Pier's conclusion? Residents of Los Angeles don't like food."

"The so-called "hardcore" gamer is a marketing brainwashed, innovation shunting, self-righteous idiot who pays videogame makers far too much money than what is delivered."