For me, I appreciated it as it added an extra flavour to the game, one I felt was lacking in the previous instalment and also not as repetitive as the time-travel mechanic from the first game. This game adds back in a supernatural element and this can attract or deter people subjectively. The gameplay is also mostly the same mechanics we have seen in previous games. I guess this is an attempt to make it feel authentic, but I prefer a simple list of items rather than the scattergraph presented when I open the backpack. What bewilders me is the unfriendly layout of the backpack. It really helps that the environment tends to be highlighted well to show where interactions can happen. The graphics feel very familiar if you have played the previous games and I appreciate the somewhat cell-shaded approach like a manga. LIS2 is split into 5 chapters, quite arbitrarily it seems. I ended up playing half of it and just skipping forward to the full game. While I found the young Captain to be very likeable and meek with his vivid imagination, his chapter is extremely inane and monotonous with the tasks required to progress. You are encouraged to play Captain Spirit first. This is a very bewildering decision and the game must lose some review points for that. I say that because for some unknown reason Captain Spirit and Episode 5 are not on the disk. This is a very bewildering Life Is Missing.
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