Editorial: Why you should buy Panzer Dragoon Orta for your Xbox One

The Xbox One is in an interesting place in the current games generation. Lacking the exceptional first party support and third party exclusives of the PlayStation 4, the Nintendo Switch, or even the long-passed Wii U, the Xbox One carves its niche out as a competent home media center and place to play your workhorse multi-platform games. Many players have noted however, that this is not a niche that needs filling. The PlayStation 4 provides your home media wants as strongly as the One, with attractive exclusive features and games besides, as well as a generous “get free games when you subscribe to our online multiplayer” scheme, something the One mirrors with its Games with Gold feature. But there is a niche the One fills that its contemporaries skip out entirely on: backwards compatibility. Today we talk about that, an amazing hidden gem from the original Xbox, and how awesome that game is.

While both the Switch and PS4 (and even the One at launch) lacks backwards compatibility entirely, the One embraces it like no other console has. Over the years, the Xbox One has become a wondrous option for those who missed out on or simply want to keep their library of Xbox 360 multiplat staples, downloadable games, and exclusives. Enhanced performance and improved visual fidelity gives these re-releases some extra shine, and the added bonus of all compatible games being playable off of original discs just makes the deal even better.

Last year, Microsoft filled another niche: backwards compatibility with the original Xbox. The OG Xbox is a console often derided for its “gamerbro” marketing, over-saturation of gritty shooters and sports games, and massive size. Upon closer inspection though, the original Xbox becomes a secret home to a number of that generation’s best available versions of multi-platform games, along with creative, fun, and unique exclusives. One of the latter dropped onto the One just yesterday, on April 17th; the final in one of SEGA’s most revered series, and my personal pick for best action shooter of all time, Panzer Dragoon Orta. There’s a lot of OG Xbox games now available for the One, but if you only buy a single game from that selection, buy Panzer Dragoon Orta.

An Incredible Adventure from Start to Finish

Before I say anything else, you don’t need to have played the trilogy of SEGA Saturn classics to enjoy Orta. The original manual contained plot summaries of the previous three titles, but the stories are not strictly connected. All you need to know is that it’s a post-apocalyptic alien sci-fi fantasy with laser-breathing dragons, an oppressive empire, and an extinct race of ancient peoples whose technology now lies dormant in the land.

The game is a rail shooter, a genre as often derided as the console this game released on. Do not, however, write the game off simply for its genre. Orta is quite possibly the most in-depth and mechanically complex rail shooter out there, similar in execution to character action games; taking a simple gameplay concept and driving it to its maximum potential.

You’ll use your dragon’s wings to maneuver around bosses, and transform into three distinct forms with a myriad of pros and cons. There’s a leveling system to get the most out of your favorite dragon, alternate paths, 360 degree camera action, projectile dodging, and three distinct screen clearing attacks. All of it makes way for a challenging, complex, easy-to-pick-up-difficult-to-master gameplay formula that can satisfy any action fan.

Shooting and flying through ten levels with a bounty of variety in locations, gameplay scenarios, and bosses, player growth is felt in mastery of the mechanics and controls as well as pure statistical and visual growth in each of your dragon forms. With a dream-like art style featuring as many beautiful, natural environments as there are hot iron machinations and ancient, long-dead technology, the presentation is just as good now as it was in 2003. Accompanying gorgeous visuals is a brilliant soundtrack of thumping techno, tribal woodwinds, and synthetic wailing, coming together to make the action as good to listen to as it is to watch. Along with exemplary sound design, you’ve simply got one of the best presentations currently available on the One’s OG Xbox library.

Ten levels may not sound like much, but those ten levels are only scratching the surface of what Orta has to offer.

Bang For Your Buck

Panzer Dragoon Orta is $9.99 USD. On sale, it will likely go for $7.49 or $4.99 USD. For the amount of content you get in the game, this is an immense deal.

Orta comes bursting with extra content, unlocked through both normal gameplay and a secret cheat method, should you wish to spare the electricity. The Pandora’s Box bonus menu includes, but is not limited to:

  • a six mission bonus campaign from the point of view of a military boy within the Empire
  • five bonus missions, three of which take place in different playstyles entirely, with two being score attacks
  • an ultra customizable alternative game mode allowing you to tackle the game’s main missions with new powers and conditions
  • a full in-game world encyclopedia
  • a complete port of the original Panzer Dragoon from the SEGA Saturn

With a bevvy of extra content unusual for both its time period and now, Orta provides far more than just its base game experience when played. The majority of its content can be enjoyed via just one playthrough of the campaign, with more being unlocked through special criteria. Or you can log twenty three hours on the game to unlock everything automatically.

Supporting Further Releases

There’s a hefty number of Xbox exclusives and “best versions” of the era’s multi-platform releases, still trapped on the massive black brick. Orta is just one of them, and I’d like to believe that buying it (along with other OG Xbox rereleases) will help show Microsoft and other companies that these games are worthwhile and worth bringing back.

A good chunk of the games mentioned as being trapped on the OG Xbox are SEGA titles just like this one. Games like Otogi, a From Software hack and slash in a mythical Japan; Crazy Taxi 3, the most advanced of the series containing the entirety of the first two inside of it; Gunvalkyrie, a third person shooter platformer with an in-depth movement system; and perhaps SEGA’s most requested re-release besides Shenmue, the venerable Jet Set Radio Future. And if these games should release on Microsoft’s platform, I’d say buy them too, they’re all excellent.

Buying Orta might just get some of these games in player’s hands. Would it be great if these games became multi-platform instead of stuck to only one modern system? Of course. But one modern system is better than no modern systems.

Conclusion

This article may have sounded like a giant marketing push to get you to buy a game, and that’s both true and untrue. We were not remotely sponsored for this article. I don’t even own an Xbox One. I simply want people to buy this, to support an incredible game, to show SEGA and Microsoft that there’s monetary value in releasing these old classics. Most of all, I want people to experience a truly great game, forced into obscurity for its genre and system. I want to spread the joy of an overlooked gem, to provide people with a new experience, and get people interested in the legendary Panzer Dragoon series.

Really, I just want people to play a cool game I love. This wasn’t a thorough review or an in-depth analysis, just a cry of love for one of my favorite games. A celebration for a game getting its second chance. Could the game be better in its second go? Absolutely. Would I like further improvements to presentation, would I like it on other platforms, would I like it to be given the full remaster treatment? Of course. But just having the game be available in a genuine, accurate, and completely playable form is enough for me.

After all, isn’t it enough to just play a good game?

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9 responses to “Editorial: Why you should buy Panzer Dragoon Orta for your Xbox One

  1. Jordan Larsen says:

    Honestly been looking for the game for a long ass time. I once saw it in a local pawn shop for like $3 years and years ago, but at the time I didn’t know what it was and ignored it, years later I am kicking myself about it. I don’t have an Xbone, but I shall all the same continue my search… and if nothing else I can grab it off Lukiegames. I did not, however, know it contained the entirety of the original Panzer Dragoon… that is rad. Good article.

    • Miguel says:

      I’m happy I have my own copy of Panzer Dragoon Orta, if you ever get the chance to play Panzer Dragoon Saga for the Saturn its so Awesome.

  2. AfroRyan says:

    Xbox has both Games with Gold (free games for Xbox Live Gold subscribers) AND Xbox Game Pass, a separate service that gives you access to a bunch of games up front while you’re subscribed, something Sony doesn’t have an equivalent to (yet).

    • Moody says:

      Thank you for such a polite correction! As I state in the article, I do not own an Xbox One, so I was unaware of a distinction. The article is now corrected to the proper feature in the first paragraph.

    • AfroRyan says:

      You’re welcome. I imagine it’s only a matter of time Sony remarkets Playstation Now from a rent-a-title streaming service to a monthly catalog scheme instead. If PS3 PC emulation heads full steam ahead like it has been doing, I imagine PS3 (and more PS2) support on PS4 won’t be too far behind (or maybe we’ll have to wait until PS5). I want to see Sega port those PS2 games to current gen too! Shinobi, Persona 3/4 (now that it’s in their stable) and all of the orginal Sega Ages titles. Especially Gain Ground with it’s new levels and such.

  3. Kevin-N says:

    I had the game when it came out on the OG XBOX. When the 360 came out i had no OG xbox anymore and i still had the game because it was backwards compatible, but there was a bug in the emulation that you could not past level 3 to 4. that was the reason that i sold it. I regret that i sold it, because there was a solution to get past level 3. play 20 hours to get level select. But now it has been released both on xbox 360 and xbox one digital. I am not a digital fan i want normaly my games physical, but for this game i make exception. I bought it and i am loving it on my xbox one X ! I hope more people buy this game that whe maybe get a sequel one day.

  4. Rezapoc says:

    I’ve got a physical copy I bought 2nd hand years ago from gamestation and I just bought it on xbox live like the article suggests I do. I feel that some decent support for this game will send a message to Sega that a new one or remasters of the first 3 would be well received.

  5. am2model3 says:

    PanzerDragoonOrta was a huge announcement; so cool to play this at 1080p on xb1 and 4k on xb1x!!
    Phil Spencer knows what us gamers want! Such an awesome Sega game for only 9.99!
    Truly a masterpiece and belongs in any Sega fan’s collection.

  6. I’ve played it through 3 times now on the XBOX One, and it was really smooth.

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