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Legend of Mana was re-released in Japan late in 2000 as part of the Square Millennium Collection at a budget price along with a special music box and two character figurines. [29] A companion book titled Seiken Densetsu: Legend of Mana Ultimania including artwork and interviews was released as part of Square's Ultimania series.
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.
Legend of Mana: The Teardrop Crystal, known in Japan as Legend of the Sacred Sword: Legend of Mana -The Teardrop Crystal-(Japanese: 聖剣伝説 LEGEND OF MANA —THE TEARDROP CRYSTAL—, Hepburn: Seiken Densetsu: Legend of Mana -The Teardrop Crystal-), is a Japanese anime television series produced by Yokohama Animation Laboratory and Graphinica, based on the video game Legend of Mana by ...
The Mana series, known in Japan as Seiken Densetsu (聖剣伝説, lit."Holy Sword Legend"), is a role-playing video game series from Square Enix, created by Koichi Ishii.The series began as a handheld side story to Square's flagship franchise Final Fantasy, although most Final Fantasy-inspired elements were subsequently dropped, starting with the second installment, Secret of Mana.
Secret of Mana has placed on numerous top game lists since its release, and is the 13th highest-rate SNES game on aggregator website GameRankings. [86] In 1995, Total! rated Secret of Mana 12th on their "Top 100 SNES Games of All Time," [97] with Super Play ranked it eighth on its list of the best 100 SNES games of all time the following year. [98]
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 ...
Sword of Mana, originally released in Japan as Shin'yaku: Seiken Densetsu (新約 (しんやく) 聖剣伝説 (せいけんでんせつ), lit. A New Testament: The Legend of the Sacred Sword), is a 2003 action role-playing game developed by Square Enix and Brownie Brown and published by Square Enix and Nintendo for the Game Boy Advance.
Visions of Mana takes place in the fantasy world Qi'Diel, where several coexisting species are sustained by the Mana Tree, an incarnation of the Goddess of Mana. [3] [8] [9] Every four years, a being dubbed the Faerie travels to one of the eight villages tied to the eight Elementals, spirits linked to the flow of Mana.