• Home
  • About Us
  • Podcast
  • Strategy Guide Wit
  • Contact

Strategy Guide Reviews

A Strategy Guide for your Strategy Guides

  • Reviews
    • Strategy Guide Reviews
    • Video Game Reviews
    • Mini-Reviews
  • Features
    • Interviews
  • News
  • Unboxing Strategy Guides
  • Columns
    • Gaming Diary
    • Corner of Randomness
  • Videos

Bought my first DLC, and yes, it was for NIER

May 23, 2010 By Keri Honea 1 Comment

Nier and Grimoire WeissSo far with this latest generation of gaming consoles, I have not been tempted to purchase downloadable content (DLC) for my games even once. Okay, so that isn’t true. I was tempted for Lost Odyssey, but I was so very poor at the time so it never happened. I completed the fourth ending of NIER, enjoyed it immensely, and then purchased the DLC available that tells the story of Nier’s wife: “The World of the Recycled Vessel.” I attempted to play it today, and dammit, I wish I had known to not play through the fourth ending first before attempting the DLC.

This was important to know for a few reasons. Upon viewing the fourth ending, all of your game saves are WIPED. There is a reason for doing so, and it’s kind of cool and yet not at the same time. I didn’t think this would be a problem because I honestly thought that the DLC was just another chapter of the game, and not something that you do mid-game. You can’t access this new quest until Nier has Grimoire Weiss in his party. Basically, I had to play for a little over an hour before I could even access my additional content. At least this time I knew what I was doing and it went by far more quickly and hey, I got a combo Achievement out of it.

However, another thing I did not realize was that Nier’s wife’s health, weapons, and abilities mirror Nier himself. So the fact that Nier at this point in the game is only level four with two crappy weapons and two magic attacks does not forebode well for his wife. The enemies in this World are HARD. It only takes two bat bites to kill her off, and I couldn’t heal her because Nier had no medicinal herbs on him. Not to mention, her sword is so weak that it hardly fazes anything.

ARRRRRRRRRRRGH!

By the time I got to the fourth ending, Nier was at level 40! I had all the magic and all the weapons!! I had so much gold from all the sidequests that I could buy anything I needed for upgrades or whatever. I am so very, very mad at myself for not doing any research about the DLC and blowing through all four endings just so I could see it all. I’m obviously going to have to get quite further in the game in order to have any fun with Nier’s wife’s story. Sigh. And CURSES!

So for anyone looking at the NIER DLC, ye has been warned! As for me, I’m tucking my tail between my legs in shame and will focus all efforts on Bayonetta now.

Filed Under: This Has Nothing to Do with Strategy Guides!

NIER Strategy Guide review by Doug Walsh and Joe Epstein

May 22, 2010 By Keri Honea Leave a Comment

NIER Strategy Guide by Bradygames Strategy Guide Review Policy:

My goal for these strategy guide reviews is not to discuss whether one needs the guide to complete the game. Every gamer has different strengths and skills, and one may need every bit of a guide, another may need to look up information for quick assistance once, and another may laugh at the idea of ever using a guide, even the online freebies. My goal is to determine whether the guide is 1) helpful in the first place, 2) does it encompass gamers who need hand-holding as well as those who need a quick reference and 3) how much information does it really have.

Review:

NIER is pretty much a game about killing things, something Nier himself says numerous times. It’s mindless hack-and-slash most of the time; so much so that level grinding is not required. Doing as many sidequests as possible helps your stats for sure and gives you rather nice weapons, but Nier will get extremely powerful (or as the guide says, fiendishly powerful) on his own. As such, the guide doesn’t have that much to offer in terms of walkthroughs – which is fine because no one will really need them – so the authors, Doug Walsh and Joe Epstein, structured the guide to help players get the most Achievements/Trophies as possible. A large handful of the Achievements are focused on defeating the end bosses within a specific time limit, and one Achievement is strictly for beating the entire game in less than 15 hours. In other words, Walsh and Epstein focused on producing the quickest strategies possible.

For example, the sidequests slowly unlock throughout the game, and several unlock at times when you really can’t do anything about them at the moment because either the location hasn’t opened up or the person you need to talk to isn’t available at the time. The guide’s sidequest section is quick to point out when is the best time to take on each sidequest so Nier can do it immediately and not waste time. If he’s asked to go pick up some crystal, the guide will tell you not to travel to that person to activate the sidequest until Nier has access to the markets in Facade, where he can buy crystal instead of trying to hopefully gather it somewhere in the field.

There are also giant appendices in the back of the guide that provide stats, tips, and the fastest methods to become a fishing master or grow a green thumb. I did not try to grow the legendary Lunar Tear or cross-pollinate to create pink moonflower seeds, but I am sure if I followed the guide’s steps and tricks to speed up time, I would have had little difficulty (I still would have thought the process was a complete waste of time, but that’s a story for another day).

However, I did have a few difficulties with the guide, which is why it received a 4 instead of a perfect 5.

The first one was with a map of the Junk Heap in Part Two. The elevator was marked incorrectly on the guide map, and I was backtracking all over the place trying to find it. I became convinced that I was trapped in this section, because obviously, there was no way out. The one good that came of it was all the experience I received from smashing robots and all of the items I collected (I found enough broken antennas to build my own city). An inaccurately marked map is a rookie mistake, and it never should have happened, no matter that it didn’t get me killed or eternally lost.

I also had issues with two of the sidequests, and both were in Part Two. The quest “Contract for a Contractor” required Nier to pick up a few items that could only be found in the B2 level of the Junk Heap, but the guide never once said that Nier couldn’t reach that area until a certain point of the game when he acquires access to that floor. Yet again, I was running all over the place, trying to figure out where this mystery elevator was that could take me to B2. The second quest, “The Pride of  a Lover” needed some fluorite from the Barren Temple in the desert. The guide told me exactly where to go to find it and even provided a screenshot of the location, but after combing the room for far longer than I should have, it became apparent that the fluorite doesn’t appear in the same place in the Temple each time you play. I found it on a completely different floor than the guide suggested. I really can’t fault the writers for this, because they would not have known or even thought to have check that the fluorite was always there.

The fact that all these problems stem from Part 2 makes me think that the writers or even the publisher got a little rushed toward the end. Even though these problems did not ruin my experience with the guide or the game, it is the little things that keep the NIER Strategy Guide from perfection.

Filed Under: Strategy Guide Reviews

Stop the Sheep Murder!

May 7, 2010 By Keri Honea Leave a Comment

Nier is rated M for Mature. I can handle such games, I really can. But as strange as it sounds, I don’t mind violence if it’s directed toward people, as said people are usually quite evil. But when I have to kill animals in a game, I have a hard time with it unless they are trying to eat me.

In Nier, you have to take on some missions to kill sheep for food. I understand why I have to kill them, but I still wasn’t prepared for them to cry out when you kill them. And if that wasn’t enough, they don’t stop bleeding. They fall over and continue to pool blood beneath them. I know that that is realistic, but I don’t really play for realism.

As a result, I get very sad with each sheep and goat I slaughter. However, the tearful bleats of death and pools of blood won’t stop me from trying to get the Achievement for killing 100 sheep. So I’ll be an odd mixture of sad and happy.

I hope these people really need all this mutton to eat.

Filed Under: This Has Nothing to Do with Strategy Guides!

Follow us!

Subscribe!

Upcoming Strategy Guides

 Nothing here. Come back later. 😢

Latest Strategy Guide Reviews

The Walkthrough by Doug Walsh Review

Red Dead Redemption 2 Strategy Guide Review

Mega Man 11 Strategy Guide Review

God of War Strategy Guide Review

Far Cry 5 Strategy Guide Review

Friends of SGR

  • BradyGames
  • Dan Birlew – Guide Writer
  • Doug Walsh – Guide Writer
  • Future Press
  • Game Enthus
  • GameWires.com
  • Piggyback
  • Press the Buttons
  • Prima Games
  • Racing Games

Top Posts & Pages

  • LEGO Marvel Super Heroes Strategy Guide Review
  • I EFFING HATE HELICOPTERS
  • I admit it, I make mistakes too
  • Dissidia Duodecim Strategy Guide Review
  • Fuse Strategy Guide Review

Copyright © 2026 · Web crafted by Warkhammer

Loading Comments...