- A canon divergent Tales of Berseria story with a new happier ending, more story ties to Zestiria, OC x Velvet Crowe romance, and a lot of worldbuilding. Rated: Fiction T - English - Fantasy/Romance - OC, Velvet C. Eleanor H., Laphicet - Chapters: 45 - Words: 396,725 - Reviews: 152 - Favs: 216 - Follows: 240 - Updated: 7/21 - Published: 7/2.
- Got Tales of Berseria withdrawal? Return to Midgand with vengeful antihero Velvet in the manga adaptation of the JRPG hit! VENTURING ONWARD With her sights set on Artorius, Velvet arrives in the capital city of Loegres alongside Rokurou the daemon, Magilou the witch, Eizen the reaper, and Laphicet, the malak under contract to the Abbey.
- Tales of Berseria is the prequel to Tales of Zestiria, set in the distant past of the world. The land of Midgand is under constant fear of the Scarlet Night, where humans and animals succumb to evil spirits that consume the living. That was until one day, a man named Artorius Colbrande appeared. With his holy sword, philosophy and followers, he saved the world from eating itself.
#593Tales of Berseria v1.48.00#193 + 12 DLCs
In TALES OF BERSERIA, players embark on a journey of self-discovery as they assume the role of Velvet, a young woman whose once kind demeanor has been replaced and overcome with a festering anger. Tales of Berseria is the sixteenth main title game in the Tales series. Developed and produced by Bandai Namco Entertainment, the game was released in Japan for the Playstation 3 and Playstation 4.
Genres/Tags: RPG, Third-person, 3D, Japanese
Companies: Bandai Namco Studios
Languages: RUS/ENG/MULTI7
Original Size: 13.7 GB
Repack Size: from 5.7 GB [Selective Download]
Download Mirrors
- ExtraTorrent [magnet] [.torrent file only]
- RuTor [magnet]
- Tapochek.net [magnet]
- Filehoster: MultiUpload (10+ hosters, interchangeable)
- Filehoster: MEGA.nz (Uploaded by John07, compatible with torrent)
- Filehoster: 3 hosters (Uploaded by Susch, interchangeable, not compatible with MultiUpload)
- Filehoster: We4Load (Uploaded by Theprocss69, not compatible with MultiUpload)
Screenshots (Click to enlarge)
Repack Features
- Based on Tales.Of.Berseria-CPY ISO release: cpy-tob.iso (14,722,529,280 bytes)
- Game version: v1.48.00#193, 12 DLCs included (you have to activate them in game menu)
- 100% Lossless & MD5 Perfect: all files are identical to originals after installation (when installed with Japanese audio and lossless videos)
- NOTHING ripped, NOTHING re-encoded
- Selective download feature: you can select the videos quality to download/install and can skip Japanese audio, if you don't need it
- Significantly smaller archive size (compressed from 13.7 to 5.7~10.7 GB, depending on selected components)
- Installation takes 5-12 minutes (depending on your system and selected components)
- After-install integrity check so you could make sure that everything installed properly
- HDD space after installation: up to 14 GB
- Use 'Language Selector.exe' in game root to change the game language
- Repack uses pZlib library by Razor12911
A tale of emotion versus reason…
In Tales of Berseria, players embark on a journey of self-discovery as they assume the role of Velvet, a young woman whose once kind demeanor has been replaced and overcome with a festering anger and hatred after a traumatic experience three years prior to the events within Tales of Berseria. Velvet will join a crew of pirates as they sail across the sea and visit the many islands that make up the sacred kingdom of Midgand in an all-new adventure developed by the celebrated team behind the Tales of series. Veteran Tales of character designer Mutsumi Inomata has personally designed Velvet and famous Japanese animation studio, ufotable, returns to animate the game's breathtaking cutscenes; delivering truly epic and emotional storytelling in their unique style.
Included DLCs
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 1
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 2
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 3
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 4
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Items Super Pack
- Tales of Berseria – Attachment Set
- Tales of Berseria – High School Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – [email protected] Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Japanese, Fairy, and Menagerie Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Maid/Butler Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Pirate Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Summer Holiday Costume Pack
You can skip downloading of video/audio files you don't need. Here is the list of such files: Bijoy bayanno for windows 10 free download.
- setup-fitgirl-optional-japanese-voiceovers.bin (self-explaning)
- setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossless.bin (get either this OR lossy version, you don't need both)
- setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossy.bin (get either this OR lossless version, you don't need both)
In example, if you want to launch the game with Englis UI/Subtitles/Voiceovers and with re-encoded lossy videos – skip all selective/optional files,
but download setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossy.bin & all main files (01-03).
As you know, I don't like lossy repacking. This particular game is a rare exception. All game videos on PC are rendered in 1080p with 24fps. But actually the displayed framerate for many scenes varies from 7 to 15, which is typical for Japanese animation.
So, for those, who desperatly fights for every GB of traffic, I've made an optional lossy versions of those videos. Of course, they look crappy in some scenes compared to original – blocky, poor red color, artefacts on edges. But many people won't see the difference or will cope with what they get for that small size.
As always, I don't push you nor I make a choice for you.
Here is the example of re-encoded video, the opening cinematics, transcoded from original BINK2 1080p to BINK1 1080p format with reduced bitrate.
Adobe premiere pro free download 2019. It's an self-playing executable, so you can simply run and watch it, no codecs or players required.
Watch and decide if you need to spend additional 5 GBs for original videos or re-encoded videos would be enough.
Open CPY.ini, located in game root witn any text editor
and set new custom path in string: SavePath=%DEFAULT_CPY_DIR%
In example: SavePath=C:TOB_Saves
Also make sure you have indexing turned ON and compression turned OFF for folder with saves.
Windows Search also must be active.
I've always been a fan of the Tales series from Bandai Namco Entertainment, yet haven't kept up with all the releases. I was refreshed to learn of the latest release, Tales of Berseria, with the series's first ever female protagonist.
It first hit the shelves in native Japan in August 2016, then worldwide early this year in January.
In this edition we are once again in the Holy Midgand Empire, just as the previous Tales release and in fact, Berseria is a prequel to Tales of Zestiria.
The realm is troubled by daemonblight, a viral disease that is turning normal Midgand citizens into bloodthirsty demons. One fateful night called The Scarlet Night, daemonblight is cast upon the town where Velvet lives with her brother, Laphicet, and brother-in-law Artorius.
No true spoiler here as this all happens immediately in the beginning of the game; Velvet finds Artorius ready to ritually sacrifice her brother–while the same night herself becoming a demon in the ritual, and thus the revenge plot against the once family-friend who killed her brother is set in stone.
Unlike a typical Tales protagonist, Velvet takes on the antihero narrative. She's what's known as a therion, a demon who consumes other demons to survive. She is part of the demonic pestilence laying waste to the land, of whom Midgand's Exorcists band to fight. She has a vengeful blood lust for Artorius and has spent years trapped in a prison wearing nothing but tattered rags.
I find this refreshing, jaded from the story of the all-perfect, happy-go-lucky male hero. Yet, Velvet's weakness for her brother Laphicet revealed throughout the game sheds light onto her true softer side, and, along the way, she meets many characters to help her in her quest.
Tales Of Berseria Midgand
While some may find it quite charming, others may find the amount of story excessive, especially the impatient gamer. The beginning of the game features an awesome yet lengthy anime sequence I found impressive while anxiously awaiting its finish.
It's reassuring that Bandai Namco takes the time to fill their games with quality content, to the point there's multiple types of cut-scenes. Not only will you have the cinematic in-game graphic cut-scenes, but you'll also have optional and sometimes not so optional cut-scenes of simplified anime-style skits.
If you're looking for a thorough anime experience with heavy story while playing your favorite Japanese RPG, then Berseria is definitely for you; if you're in the mood to only hack and slash, you'll have that experience mainly while grinding dungeons.
Verbosity aside, the ongoing story itself is not always easy to guess, having just enough twists to keep it interesting and less of the typical straightforward ‘save the world' narrative, the developers also invest heavily into the personal lore of each character.
Gameplay
Playing the PC version of the game with my ASUS 960 OC graphics card, I was able to max all graphical settings and the game has run flawlessly without lag. The only issue I've encountered is that it doesn't like to ALT+TAB away, but as you can imagine, this is a very minor issue.
The game is very straightforward in its delivery, as you'll travel across linear maps of towns connected between large hostile monster-ridden areas.
Navigation is third-person and simple, as characters' main ability is to walk and inspect objects and you're able to quick-save whenever you please, a feature I appreciate in every game.
Mini games are plentiful and usually located in towns, and while in dungeons you can command ships to explore seas and retrieve valuable items which may be used for battle bonuses. Most of your in-game time however whether you're grinding or not, will be spent either in a cut-scene or dungeon.
You'll have no shortage of gald if you sell item drops especially when grinding on harder difficulty; it's refreshingly easy to be a rich demoness in Berseria if you desire, and you'll need the money–one phrase: Mabou Curry auto-cook.
I find the crafting system is generous and satisfying, as you're able to easily upgrade your weapons at shops using items acquired from battle drops and looting the towns. Weapons are able to receive several bonuses as well as level up through use in battle.
You won't be having a single player fighting experience here. In Berseria, characters travel in a party. You'll fight alongside up to three other characters with the ability to command and play each one of them.
I found the keyboard layout quite intuitive for combat, and it was easy to toggle between characters, though sometimes when toggling it wouldn't always work.
It's sophisticated hack and slash, the type I enjoy–characters have up to four different combo sequences of your choice, with the ability to potentially loop endlessly between combos while fighting. Epic break scenes for special moves help mitigate any monotony of the fights. Accelerometerdll dll install.
The combat is adequately complex, which gives the game a less juvenile and more all-ages feel. Characters have extensive abilities that you can customize to your keys. You're able to make tactical moves such as commanding other characters to be more defensive or aggressive, and how and how often to use certain abilities–making preparing and strategizing during battle a creative and interesting experience. I was happy to see a system of weaknesses and resistances for tactical depth.
One light bummer–making tactical moves involves pausing the game to the menu then back to the battle, and, depending what you're doing, a lot of time can be spent organizing commands for multiple characters to improve your strategy.
As much as I really love the combat, a major bummer is the difficulty balancing. Battles will feel easy especially for the skilled and intense gamer, even up until the hardest difficulty I unlocked, Chaos.
Midland Tales Of Bursaria
There is a mechanic for when crossing two monsters on the map that you'll have a battle called a dangerous encounter. The difference between Chaos regular encounter, and Chaos dangerous encounter is inexplicably, exponentially different, especially if a random mini-boss called a dire foe spawns randomly at the end of it.
Velvet has incredible unbreakable moves and the ability to regenerate HP in combat, so it's easy to rely on her to win the hard battles, which makes playing the other characters more of a novelty than something you'll consistently do if you're playing on a hard difficulty or for boss battles.
The harder the difficulty the better the weapon drops, so as you can imagine it can be frustrating trying to grind for the ultimate weapon, thus on high difficulties you'll be better off playing dangerous encounters on easier monster groups. This unbalancing really affected the playability for me unfortunately, but those happy with normal and hard difficulty will not mind.
Tales of Berseria delivers rich, wholesome storytelling with the experience of watching an anime and exhilarating fast-paced combat that, depending on your difficulty level and personal preference should make grinding for XP enjoyable more so than tedious. The game is very combat and story oriented.
There is much to do, and you'll easily clock tens of hours in the game for longterm playing, with re-playability likely combat-focused playing other characters.
- A canon divergent Tales of Berseria story with a new happier ending, more story ties to Zestiria, OC x Velvet Crowe romance, and a lot of worldbuilding. Rated: Fiction T - English - Fantasy/Romance - OC, Velvet C. Eleanor H., Laphicet - Chapters: 45 - Words: 396,725 - Reviews: 152 - Favs: 216 - Follows: 240 - Updated: 7/21 - Published: 7/2.
- Got Tales of Berseria withdrawal? Return to Midgand with vengeful antihero Velvet in the manga adaptation of the JRPG hit! VENTURING ONWARD With her sights set on Artorius, Velvet arrives in the capital city of Loegres alongside Rokurou the daemon, Magilou the witch, Eizen the reaper, and Laphicet, the malak under contract to the Abbey.
- Tales of Berseria is the prequel to Tales of Zestiria, set in the distant past of the world. The land of Midgand is under constant fear of the Scarlet Night, where humans and animals succumb to evil spirits that consume the living. That was until one day, a man named Artorius Colbrande appeared. With his holy sword, philosophy and followers, he saved the world from eating itself.
#593Tales of Berseria v1.48.00#193 + 12 DLCs
In TALES OF BERSERIA, players embark on a journey of self-discovery as they assume the role of Velvet, a young woman whose once kind demeanor has been replaced and overcome with a festering anger. Tales of Berseria is the sixteenth main title game in the Tales series. Developed and produced by Bandai Namco Entertainment, the game was released in Japan for the Playstation 3 and Playstation 4.
Genres/Tags: RPG, Third-person, 3D, Japanese
Companies: Bandai Namco Studios
Languages: RUS/ENG/MULTI7
Original Size: 13.7 GB
Repack Size: from 5.7 GB [Selective Download]
Download Mirrors
- ExtraTorrent [magnet] [.torrent file only]
- RuTor [magnet]
- Tapochek.net [magnet]
- Filehoster: MultiUpload (10+ hosters, interchangeable)
- Filehoster: MEGA.nz (Uploaded by John07, compatible with torrent)
- Filehoster: 3 hosters (Uploaded by Susch, interchangeable, not compatible with MultiUpload)
- Filehoster: We4Load (Uploaded by Theprocss69, not compatible with MultiUpload)
Screenshots (Click to enlarge)
Repack Features
- Based on Tales.Of.Berseria-CPY ISO release: cpy-tob.iso (14,722,529,280 bytes)
- Game version: v1.48.00#193, 12 DLCs included (you have to activate them in game menu)
- 100% Lossless & MD5 Perfect: all files are identical to originals after installation (when installed with Japanese audio and lossless videos)
- NOTHING ripped, NOTHING re-encoded
- Selective download feature: you can select the videos quality to download/install and can skip Japanese audio, if you don't need it
- Significantly smaller archive size (compressed from 13.7 to 5.7~10.7 GB, depending on selected components)
- Installation takes 5-12 minutes (depending on your system and selected components)
- After-install integrity check so you could make sure that everything installed properly
- HDD space after installation: up to 14 GB
- Use 'Language Selector.exe' in game root to change the game language
- Repack uses pZlib library by Razor12911
A tale of emotion versus reason…
In Tales of Berseria, players embark on a journey of self-discovery as they assume the role of Velvet, a young woman whose once kind demeanor has been replaced and overcome with a festering anger and hatred after a traumatic experience three years prior to the events within Tales of Berseria. Velvet will join a crew of pirates as they sail across the sea and visit the many islands that make up the sacred kingdom of Midgand in an all-new adventure developed by the celebrated team behind the Tales of series. Veteran Tales of character designer Mutsumi Inomata has personally designed Velvet and famous Japanese animation studio, ufotable, returns to animate the game's breathtaking cutscenes; delivering truly epic and emotional storytelling in their unique style.
Included DLCs
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 1
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 2
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 3
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Item Pack 4
- Tales of Berseria – Adventure Items Super Pack
- Tales of Berseria – Attachment Set
- Tales of Berseria – High School Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – [email protected] Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Japanese, Fairy, and Menagerie Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Maid/Butler Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Pirate Costumes Set
- Tales of Berseria – Summer Holiday Costume Pack
You can skip downloading of video/audio files you don't need. Here is the list of such files: Bijoy bayanno for windows 10 free download.
- setup-fitgirl-optional-japanese-voiceovers.bin (self-explaning)
- setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossless.bin (get either this OR lossy version, you don't need both)
- setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossy.bin (get either this OR lossless version, you don't need both)
In example, if you want to launch the game with Englis UI/Subtitles/Voiceovers and with re-encoded lossy videos – skip all selective/optional files,
but download setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossy.bin & all main files (01-03).
As you know, I don't like lossy repacking. This particular game is a rare exception. All game videos on PC are rendered in 1080p with 24fps. But actually the displayed framerate for many scenes varies from 7 to 15, which is typical for Japanese animation.
So, for those, who desperatly fights for every GB of traffic, I've made an optional lossy versions of those videos. Of course, they look crappy in some scenes compared to original – blocky, poor red color, artefacts on edges. But many people won't see the difference or will cope with what they get for that small size.
As always, I don't push you nor I make a choice for you.
Here is the example of re-encoded video, the opening cinematics, transcoded from original BINK2 1080p to BINK1 1080p format with reduced bitrate.
Adobe premiere pro free download 2019. It's an self-playing executable, so you can simply run and watch it, no codecs or players required.
Watch and decide if you need to spend additional 5 GBs for original videos or re-encoded videos would be enough.
Open CPY.ini, located in game root witn any text editor
and set new custom path in string: SavePath=%DEFAULT_CPY_DIR%
In example: SavePath=C:TOB_Saves
Also make sure you have indexing turned ON and compression turned OFF for folder with saves.
Windows Search also must be active.
I've always been a fan of the Tales series from Bandai Namco Entertainment, yet haven't kept up with all the releases. I was refreshed to learn of the latest release, Tales of Berseria, with the series's first ever female protagonist.
It first hit the shelves in native Japan in August 2016, then worldwide early this year in January.
In this edition we are once again in the Holy Midgand Empire, just as the previous Tales release and in fact, Berseria is a prequel to Tales of Zestiria.
The realm is troubled by daemonblight, a viral disease that is turning normal Midgand citizens into bloodthirsty demons. One fateful night called The Scarlet Night, daemonblight is cast upon the town where Velvet lives with her brother, Laphicet, and brother-in-law Artorius.
No true spoiler here as this all happens immediately in the beginning of the game; Velvet finds Artorius ready to ritually sacrifice her brother–while the same night herself becoming a demon in the ritual, and thus the revenge plot against the once family-friend who killed her brother is set in stone.
Unlike a typical Tales protagonist, Velvet takes on the antihero narrative. She's what's known as a therion, a demon who consumes other demons to survive. She is part of the demonic pestilence laying waste to the land, of whom Midgand's Exorcists band to fight. She has a vengeful blood lust for Artorius and has spent years trapped in a prison wearing nothing but tattered rags.
I find this refreshing, jaded from the story of the all-perfect, happy-go-lucky male hero. Yet, Velvet's weakness for her brother Laphicet revealed throughout the game sheds light onto her true softer side, and, along the way, she meets many characters to help her in her quest.
Tales Of Berseria Midgand
While some may find it quite charming, others may find the amount of story excessive, especially the impatient gamer. The beginning of the game features an awesome yet lengthy anime sequence I found impressive while anxiously awaiting its finish.
It's reassuring that Bandai Namco takes the time to fill their games with quality content, to the point there's multiple types of cut-scenes. Not only will you have the cinematic in-game graphic cut-scenes, but you'll also have optional and sometimes not so optional cut-scenes of simplified anime-style skits.
If you're looking for a thorough anime experience with heavy story while playing your favorite Japanese RPG, then Berseria is definitely for you; if you're in the mood to only hack and slash, you'll have that experience mainly while grinding dungeons.
Verbosity aside, the ongoing story itself is not always easy to guess, having just enough twists to keep it interesting and less of the typical straightforward ‘save the world' narrative, the developers also invest heavily into the personal lore of each character.
Gameplay
Playing the PC version of the game with my ASUS 960 OC graphics card, I was able to max all graphical settings and the game has run flawlessly without lag. The only issue I've encountered is that it doesn't like to ALT+TAB away, but as you can imagine, this is a very minor issue.
The game is very straightforward in its delivery, as you'll travel across linear maps of towns connected between large hostile monster-ridden areas.
Navigation is third-person and simple, as characters' main ability is to walk and inspect objects and you're able to quick-save whenever you please, a feature I appreciate in every game.
Mini games are plentiful and usually located in towns, and while in dungeons you can command ships to explore seas and retrieve valuable items which may be used for battle bonuses. Most of your in-game time however whether you're grinding or not, will be spent either in a cut-scene or dungeon.
You'll have no shortage of gald if you sell item drops especially when grinding on harder difficulty; it's refreshingly easy to be a rich demoness in Berseria if you desire, and you'll need the money–one phrase: Mabou Curry auto-cook.
I find the crafting system is generous and satisfying, as you're able to easily upgrade your weapons at shops using items acquired from battle drops and looting the towns. Weapons are able to receive several bonuses as well as level up through use in battle.
You won't be having a single player fighting experience here. In Berseria, characters travel in a party. You'll fight alongside up to three other characters with the ability to command and play each one of them.
I found the keyboard layout quite intuitive for combat, and it was easy to toggle between characters, though sometimes when toggling it wouldn't always work.
It's sophisticated hack and slash, the type I enjoy–characters have up to four different combo sequences of your choice, with the ability to potentially loop endlessly between combos while fighting. Epic break scenes for special moves help mitigate any monotony of the fights. Accelerometerdll dll install.
The combat is adequately complex, which gives the game a less juvenile and more all-ages feel. Characters have extensive abilities that you can customize to your keys. You're able to make tactical moves such as commanding other characters to be more defensive or aggressive, and how and how often to use certain abilities–making preparing and strategizing during battle a creative and interesting experience. I was happy to see a system of weaknesses and resistances for tactical depth.
One light bummer–making tactical moves involves pausing the game to the menu then back to the battle, and, depending what you're doing, a lot of time can be spent organizing commands for multiple characters to improve your strategy.
As much as I really love the combat, a major bummer is the difficulty balancing. Battles will feel easy especially for the skilled and intense gamer, even up until the hardest difficulty I unlocked, Chaos.
Midland Tales Of Bursaria
There is a mechanic for when crossing two monsters on the map that you'll have a battle called a dangerous encounter. The difference between Chaos regular encounter, and Chaos dangerous encounter is inexplicably, exponentially different, especially if a random mini-boss called a dire foe spawns randomly at the end of it.
Velvet has incredible unbreakable moves and the ability to regenerate HP in combat, so it's easy to rely on her to win the hard battles, which makes playing the other characters more of a novelty than something you'll consistently do if you're playing on a hard difficulty or for boss battles.
The harder the difficulty the better the weapon drops, so as you can imagine it can be frustrating trying to grind for the ultimate weapon, thus on high difficulties you'll be better off playing dangerous encounters on easier monster groups. This unbalancing really affected the playability for me unfortunately, but those happy with normal and hard difficulty will not mind.
Tales of Berseria delivers rich, wholesome storytelling with the experience of watching an anime and exhilarating fast-paced combat that, depending on your difficulty level and personal preference should make grinding for XP enjoyable more so than tedious. The game is very combat and story oriented.
There is much to do, and you'll easily clock tens of hours in the game for longterm playing, with re-playability likely combat-focused playing other characters.
I recommend it to any Tales fan, especially those nostalgic of the previous titles. What do you think of this latest Tales release?