Disgaea
Disgaea, electronic game released by the Japanese video-game company Nippon Ichi Software for the Sony Corporation’s PlayStation 2 console in 2003 under the title Netherworld Battle Chronicle: Disgaea. The game was released in the United States the same year under the title Disgaea: The Hour of Darkness. The award-winning game prompted multiple spin-offs and sequels.
The plot centres on Prince Laharl, a demon who resides in Netherworld, a kingdom once ruled by his father. When Laharl wakes up from a two-year nap to discover his father is dead, he sets out to claim Netherworld as his own. Along the way, Laharl joins a sprawling cast of unique and colourful characters, whose humorous interactions are one of the game’s true strengths. In a departure from typical role-playing games (RPGs), Disgaea’s primary mode is a sequence of set battles that take place on grid-based maps with various features in each square of the grid. Game play is similar to that of genre definers Final Fantasy Tactics and Ogre Battle. Players develop and fine-tune a small party of warriors who face off against a similar party of enemies. Victory is obtained when one side wipes out the other. A vast number of weapons, techniques, and advances are available in the game—the pursuit of which can, for some players, overshadow or even replace the main quest.
Later releases in the series include Disgaea 2: Cursed Memories (2006) for the PlayStation 2 and Disgaea 3: Absence of Justice (2008) for the PlayStation 3, as well as a number of spin-offs. New downloadable characters for use in Disgaea 3 have been made available over Sony’s PlayStation Network (PSN). Disgaea’s board-game style also made it a good fit for portable gaming devices, such as the Sony PSP and the Nintendo DS, for which versions of the series have been produced.