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The Mana series, known in Japan as Seiken Densetsu (聖剣伝説, lit. The Legend of the Sacred Sword), is an action role-playing game series created by Koichi Ishii, with development formerly from Square, and is currently owned by Square Enix.
The original score for Legend of Mana was composed, arranged, and produced by Yoko Shimomura. [20] Shimomura was a newcomer to the series; the previous two Mana games were scored by Hiroki Kikuta, and the first by Kenji Ito. [21] Shimomura said in 2002 that she considered the soundtrack to Legend of Mana to be the one that best expresses ...
Games in the Mana series (Seiken Densetsu series in Japan). Pages in category "Mana (series) video games" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.
A category concerning the Square Co. and Square Enix computer role-playing video games series Mana (known in Japan as Seiken Densetsu). Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
The Game Awards 2023 was, as with every year, filled with announcements for big and small games alike. One of those games is Visions of Mana, a new game in the legendary Mana series and the first ...
Visions of Mana had both a standard edition, and a special edition with additional bonuses including in-game costumes and music from earlier Mana games. A demo covering a section of the game was released on July 30, 2024, with players receiving bonus weapons in the full release if they had save data from the demo.
The story takes place in a fictional world where Mana represents an ethereal, but finite, energy source. Some time in the past, the Mana Goddess created the game's world by forging the powerful Sword of Mana and defeating eight monsters of destruction, the Benevodons—"God Beasts" in earlier translations—with it, sealing them within eight Mana Stones, before turning herself into the Mana ...
The series began with the 1999 Game Boy game Seiken Densetsu (Final Fantasy Adventure) as a handheld side story to Square's flagship franchise Final Fantasy, though the Final Fantasy-inspired elements were subsequently dropped starting with the second installment, Secret of Mana, as the games became their own series.