Ni no Kuni II review – kings and subjects unite for a fair deal
Once the obvious decrees have been made - free sweets, everlasting school holidays! - most children, if asked to reign for a day, would surely wish for peace and plenty for their kingdom. So it is with Evan Pettiwhisker Tildrum, a prince made, in sudden and bloody circumstances, an exiled king who, together with a growing band of friends, supporters and assorted strays, must build an empire and an alluring constitution to draw subjects to his freshly birthed nation.
Rendered in the Studio Ghibli aesthetic - defined here by artist Yoshiyuki Momose and composer Joe Hisaishi, who both worked on the Japanese studio's Oscar-winning Spirited Away - the newly released Ni no Kuni II's non-threatening whimsy is stylish but childlike. And for the first few hours, while searching for a patch of unclaimed land on which to settle a capital, it's a likable adventure. You bumble over hill and dale, slaying monsters, incrementally upgrading your swords and sandals, and sleeping off the effort at local inns.
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