Paladin's Quest
Paladin's Quest (known as Lennus in Japan) is an RPG for SNES. Its most notable features are its unusual magic system and the mercenaries you can hire to pad out your party. It was also noteable for being very, very weird.
Chezni is a 13-year-old boy in a magic school who accidentally activates an ancient weapon of mass destruction and then finds himself Walking the Earth on a quest to defeat it and save the world. Chezni soon meets with a girl called Midia, also a spiritualist, who becomes the only permanent companion on his quest. The plot is complicated by the world-conquering ambitions of the Evil Overlord Zaygos who already rules the southern continent and is eyeing the northern one.
A sequel, Lennus II, was released in Japan in 1996, unfortunately, it was never localized. The fact that it was released a month after the Nintendo 64 in Japan and the obscurity of the original in North America were probably significant factors.
- All in a Row
- Arbitrary Headcount Limit: You can only ever have up to four playable characters in your party.
- Bishonen:
- Zaygos turns out to be one.
- Also Duke, the Let's Play even nicknames him "Duchess" to play on it. It turns out there's a very good reason for this.
- Blind Idiot Translation: One undead enemy is called a "spilit".
- Boss Remix: The final battle music includes remixed portions of the main battle theme and Zaygos' theme. Likewise, the fight with Zaygos is a remixed version of his main theme.
- Breaking the Fourth Wall: Once you get your method of flight, and the map reveals the half of the world you didn't know existed, you can clearly see things that were put in there by the devs for laughs, like and island shaped like googly eyes.
- Broken Bridge: Happens a lot.
- But Thou Must!
- Cast from Hit Points: The entire magic system is based on this.
- Commonplace Rare: There is a limited amount of bottles you can acquire in the game, especially of the bigger varieties.
- Degraded Boss
- Doomed Hometown
- Elemental Powers: Earth, Fire, Water, Air, Sky, Lightning, Sphere and Heart. And no, Heart is far from useless.
- Encounter Repellant
- Enemy Without/The Heartless: Suggested to be the true nature of the Monsters of Dal Gran and Noi Gren.
- Evil Overlord: Zaygos.
- Faceless Eye: Doth.
- Global Airship
- Guest Star Party Member: Several.
- Healing Spring
- Heroic Mime: Chezni.
- History Repeats: It's shown during the time travel episode that the conflict between Chezni, Midia and Zaygos over Dal Gren is a repetition of the events that happened between Kormu, Sophie and Gabnid 1000 years ago. Chezni and Midia are explicitly indicated to be the successors to Kormu and Sophie, and Zaygos and Gabnid share the same attack pattern as bosses.
- Hopeless Boss Fight: No less than three different ones, but probably many more total for most players if they finish the game.
- Idiot Ball: Zaygos gets handed one right after an episode of surprising competence.
- Kid Hero: Chezni and Midia are both 13.
- Lethal Joke Item: The "bib" is actually a very strong body armor.
- Load-Bearing Boss/Synchronization: Dal Gren, Noi Gren and their monsters Strabo, Kaymat and Lokiarn.
- Lost Technology
- Mad Scientist
- Magic Knight: Several characters, including the main hero.
- The Maze: The crystal world.
- Mecha-Mooks
- Money Spider: In particular, the Gold Gubos drop a lot of gold if you can defeat them.
- Musical Spoiler: There is a particularly obvious one when you first enter Joyce's baker's shop.
- Nominal Importance
- Non-Lethal KO: Characters who fall in battle are back to 1 hp after the battle if the party wins.
- One-Winged Angel
- One Hundred Percent Completion: Every mercenary you recruit will appear in the big party at the end of the game. To get everyone to appear, you have to recruit every single mercenary (some of whom may be Lost Forever if you didn't recruit them the first time you go through the area they're in). While this doesn't actually unlock anything special, it does add a bit to the ending since every merc has something unique to say to the party.
- Optional Party Member: The mercenaries. Some of them want money while others'll join for free if you let them.
- Orphan's Plot Trinket: Midia's crown.
- Our Dragons Are Different
- Random Encounters
- Retraux: One house is done in the style of the original Dragon Quest, complete with priest sprite.
- Saving the World
- Sealed Evil in a Can
- Stable Time Loop: The undead-looking dragon you meet early on in the game, who woke up when you removed the Sword of Kormu from his body and carries you to the southern continent before dying? He recognized you because you were the one to seal him in the past, ten-thousand years ago. With the Sword of Kormu, of course.
- Stat Grinding: Your affinities with the spirits that determine how powerful your spells are grow by casting spells related to those spirits.
- Sword of Plot Advancement
- Took a Level in Badass: The mercenary G Rasav.
- Underground Level
- Underground Monkey
- Unexpected Gameplay Change: The Crystal Maze, which is also That One Level. There, the game changes from an RPG into a puzzle game, a very hard puzzle game.
- Unwitting Pawn: Chezni in the beginning.
- Useless Useful Spell: Partially averted and even inverted. The monsters' attempts to hit the players with status effects and instant death have a miserable rate of success. The instant death spells cast by the players at the monsters don't fare any better than that, but a fully leveled-up Freeze has a decent rate of success in player hands and makes some early boss fights much easier.
- Walking the Earth
- Wizarding School: You start the game in one of these. It doesn't last long though.
- Womb Level: You get to explore the insides of a dragon. It's a fairly straight tunnel. The dragon's mouth is the exit.
- You Have Failed Me...: Zaygos proves himself quite savvy by predicting and preparing for your entry into his temple. However, despite having using it to his advantage, he shows himself as a major Bad Boss by having the entire town massacred as punishment for allowing you to sneak in. Despite having made it part of his plans in the first place.