Library of Ruina

Library of Ruina
Developer(s)Project Moon
Publisher(s)Project Moon (PC, XONE)
Arc System Works (NS, PS4)
Platform(s)
ReleaseWindows, Xbox One
August 10, 2021
Nintendo Switch, PS4
April 25, 2024
Genre(s)Role-playing, deck-building, visual novel
Mode(s)Single-player

Library of Ruina is an indie deck-building turn-based role-playing game developed and published by South Korean studio Project Moon. Initially released for Windows and Xbox One on August 10, 2021, it is a direct sequel to the 2018 PC game Lobotomy Corporation.

The game generally received positive reviews for PC, but mixed to negative reviews on console. A sequel, Limbus Company, was released in 2023 for Windows, iOS, and Android devices. The light novel The Distortion Detective[1] is a side story takes place during the events of Library of Ruina. Another light novel, Leviathan,[2] was illustrated as a comic, taking place between Library of Ruina's true ending and the start of Limbus Company.

Gameplay

[edit]

Reception

[edit]

The titular library is split up into ten unlockable floors for fighting against enemies, or "guests", in battles known as "receptions". Before the start of each reception, players enter the preparation phase where they can change equipment and inspect opponents' stats, including HP, Stagger Resist (SR), resistance values, and equipment. A reception may span over multiple acts; players upon clearing an act will return to the preparation phase for the next act. Librarians' equipment cannot be changed in-between acts; they lose status effects that retain from the last act, but will keep their HP and Emotion level, and their Stagger Resist is recovered to full.

Library of Ruina's story is primarily shown in a visual novel format. Cutscenes about guests and miscellaneous discussions are shown once a reception starts and ends, typically delivered through conversations between two library residents, Angela and Roland.

Combat

[edit]
A screen shot depicting gameplay for Library of Ruina during a reception.

The player's main method of defeating guests is with Combat pages, items used to attack and defend in combat through predetermined actions. Attacks deal both physical and stagger damage, affecting characters' HP and SR respectively. If a character's SR reaches zero, they will be unable to move and receive fatal damage from all attacks until their SR resets the next turn. A character dies (for the ongoing reception) if their HP reaches 0.

Upon starting the Scene, all characters' dice will randomly roll a number or value, determining its Speed and the order of characters' actions. Librarians can redirect Combat pages towards them if they possess higher Speed than their target. Most characters (except bosses) start a reception with 1 or 2 dice.

If a librarian redirects a Combat page or opposes a Combat page directed at them, they enter a clash where both sides' Combat pages' actions interact with each other. Two dice will roll and the highest value will act; if both dice roll the same value, actions will be canceled out.[3] Else, the attack counts as a one-sided action where attacks are not opposed.

The player needs to carefully manage available resources, namely 'Light' (a form of combat stamina) and Combat pages, which return into the deck to be randomly picked upon usage. If the librarian's current Light is lower than the cost of any available Combat page, or if the librarian has no Combat pages to initiate action, they will be unable to act. Light points and Combat pages are naturally restored by one unit per turn or by raising the Emotion level of that character, which will restore all Light points.

Emotion level is a mechanic that raises whenever a character wins or loses a clash, or when their dice rolls its maximum or minimum value. The group will gain an emotional level-up after their average emotion level reaches a certain point. When the emotion level rises, the player must choose one Abnormality page to apply to a librarian. Abnormality pages come in two colors, green (Awakening) and red (Breakdown), each with its own beneficial effects and drawbacks. The emotion level can rise up to five times per battle, with a total of six Abnormality pages to be picked.[4]

Key and Combat pages

[edit]

After clearing a battle, the player will receive books of the defeated enemies. Burning these books randomly gives the player Key pages and Combat pages, color-coded based on rarity and quantity.

Key pages serve as the game's "armor" items and can be assigned to the librarians. Each gives unique stats, damage resistances, and passives. Key pages can only be obtained in limited amounts. For game progression purposes, players' Key pages may not share the same strengths or vulnerabilities with the characters as enemies.

Combat pages are the game's "weapon" items. Some Combat pages are unique to a specific character and their Key pages.[5] Pages will have at least one offensive (attacking an enemy) or defensive (defending against attacks or dodging attacks entirely) die, color-coded in red and blue, respectively.

The unique yellow-colored "Counter" die is played against an unopposed Combat page and can replay upon winning a clash until the unopposed Combat page ends. While most Combat pages are melee, there are ranged Combat pages that take action before Melee pages, Mass Attack pages that take first action regardless of Speed, and On Play pages that take effect immediately upon selection from hand.

Abnormality battles

[edit]

Players can fight in Abnormality battles, boosting the respective floor's realization level and power. Many of the Abnormalities present in-game originate from Lobotomy Corporation. Every Abnormality battle has a certain gimmick or mechanic the player must figure out to defeat them.

After completing an Abnormality battle, a new librarian will be unlocked for the floor. Including the Patron Librarian, five librarians in total will be available per floor. Players can customize a librarian's name, appearance, and combat dialogue. Completing Abnormality battles also grants Abnormality pages used in battles.

Floor realizations

[edit]

After the player has completed all of the Abnormality battles on a floor, they can begin the floor's Realization: a multi-segmented puzzle battle against either Angela or Roland as they suffer from an emotional meltdown, taking after the floor's Abnormalities' appearances and abilities. Completing the Floor realization will grant E.G.O. pages exclusive to that floor. While not mandatory, only through completing all Floor realizations (sans the Kether floor) can the player unlock the game's true ending.

Plot

[edit]

Setting

[edit]

Library of Ruina takes place in a dystopian world known as the City, which is made of twenty-six districts. The City is governed by the a reclusive organization known as the Head, while the Nests are run by Wings, mega-corporations that harness powerful technologies known as Singularities. The backstreets are crime-riddled areas controlled by various crime syndicates. Outside of the City are the Outskirts, a barren hell-like wasteland, and the Ruins, eldritch landscapes beyond the Outskirts.

Throughout the City, there are many offices run by Fixers, mercenaries regulated by the government. Each Fixer is assigned a grade based on their skill and experience.

Following the events of Lobotomy Corporation, the AI Angela creates the Library out of the light produced by Lobotomy Corporation's Seed of Light, creating an incident known as the "White Nights and Dark Days". This incident and its aftermath, mainly the Distortion phenomenon, directly influence the game's plot.

Before Angela opens the Library, a low-level Fixer named Roland appears in it and is forcefully recruited by Angela to be her guide to the City. Angela wishes to find the "one perfect book" that contains the answers she desires and turns her human. She sends out Invitations and has Roland and her other librarians battle the guests. If the guests win, they are allowed to take books from the library; if they lose, they become a book themselves.

Story

[edit]

The player follows Angela's journey toward the "one perfect book" in the Library from the view of Roland, a Fixer who becomes her servant after trespassing into the Library uninvited.

The story is broken up into various chapters. As Roland's past is gradually shed light on and Angela comes closer to becoming human, the Library becomes an ever-growing threat to the City, urging City Associations to take action. A mysterious Fixer known as Argalia recruits various characters for an unknown cause, culminating in them breaking into the Library, scattering to the ten floors to claim the Light for their greatest performance that will overturn the City. The Library ultimately emerges victorious after a hard-fought battle.

Just as Angela finally gains a human body, Roland betrays Angela and reveals his true motive for coming to the Library: to make her suffer as revenge for her actions instigating the Distortion phenomenon and indirectly causing the death of his wife. Roland ultimately fails to defeat the Library and pleads for Angela to kill him, or he will kill her if she falters.

If all of Angela's Floor realizations have not been completed, she will kill Roland and the Librarians and obtain the one true book. Angela, burdened by the guilt of killing her friends and the city folk, continues her aimless destruction for years before letting a nameless follower end her life. If all of Roland's Floor realizations have not been completed, Roland will swiftly behead Angela before returning to the City, his life spiraling into drug abuse and wanton slaughter before eventually dying meaninglessly in a gutter.

If all Floor realizations have been completed and Angela and Roland choose to forgive each other, Angela will release the culminated Light and resurrect all lives the Library has taken, kickstarting the Kether floor realization facing against Carmen, founder of Lobotomy Corporation's Seed of Light and actual mastermind behind the Distortion phenomenon. Meanwhile, Roland and the Library fight back the returned Reverberation Ensemble, now empowered by the Light, for 7 days; Roland saves Angela from dissipating inside the Light and kills Argalia for good.

The Library soon receives the arrival of the Head, who aims to expel the Library from the City and to exterminate Angela. Facing great retaliation from Roland and fellow librarians Gebura and Binah, the Head agents decide to instead stick to their main plan and expel the Library into the Outskirts. As they step outside of the Library, Angela and Roland reconcile as they decide to reopen the location under a new direction.

Development

[edit]

Music

[edit]

The majority of Library of Ruina's soundtracks were created by two music studios, South Korean game sound studio Studio EIM[6] and Japanese indie band Mili.[7] Studio EIM composed music for the main menu, receptions, abnormality suppressions, and floor realizations. In a typical reception, the floor's background music changes corresponding to its emotion level.

For Library of Ruina, Mili made a mini album, To Kill A Living Book,[8] with seven out of the eight songs being tailored to specific characters. The first song, "String Theocracy",[9] is the game's opening theme song. The eighth song in the album, "Salt, Pepper, Birds, and the Thought Police" is not a part of the official soundtrack.[10]

A small number of other tracks were borrowed from the prequel installment, Lobotomy Corporation.

Release

[edit]

Library of Ruina was initially released for Windows via Steam's early access program on May 15, 2020, before being fully released for both Windows and Xbox One on August 10, 2021. Versions for Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4 were made available via publisher Arc System Works nearly three years later on April 25, 2024.[11][12]

Reception

[edit]

The Nintendo Switch version received "mixed or average" reviews according to review aggregator Metacritic.[13]

Daniel Tack of Game Informer praised the game's music, mechanics, and narrative, but did not give the game an official rating.[17] Alice Bell of Rock Paper Shotgun described the game as "extremely odd" and "extremely terrifying".[18] Russell Troxel praised the game, stating that it is "worth every penny they’re asking".[19] Xbox Hub writer Richard Barker praised the compelling nature of the game's narrative while criticizing its unclear battle mechanics.[20]

On consoles, the game was generally positively noted for its narrative and voice acting, but was criticized for its performance issues, confusing gameplay and sluggish interface. Shaun Musgrave, in his review on TouchArcade, said the Nintendo Switch version has "fantastic characters and sublime music" with a new Japanese voiceover option. He found the console version's stability issues a downgrade from the PC counterpart, which he noted was already poorly optimized, and commented its text size is too small to be playable.[15]

Charlie Wacholz of Nintendo Life gave it a negative review, criticizing confusing gameplay, clunky menus, and performance issues. He found the game difficult to play in longer sessions due to its text being almost illegible on screen, and compare its trial-and-error gameplay to "a mild bout of Stockholm Syndrome". He scored it a 4 out of 10.[14] Kazuma Hashimoto from Siliconera left a mixed review, calling its voice acting "top notch" and enjoying its turn-based battle system for its complexity. However, he noted the Nintendo Switch version suffers from slapdash interface, whose font size is too cramped and small to read, especially in handheld mode. He rated the game 7 out of 10.[16]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "The Distortion Detective : 포스타입 시리즈". ProjectMoon (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-05-02.
  2. ^ "Leviathan - ProjectMoon Comics (English) : 포스타입 시리즈". ProjectMoon (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-05-02.
  3. ^ Black, Thomas. "Library of Ruina: The Best Game You've Never Heard Of". The Nugget. Retrieved 2024-04-30.
  4. ^ "Library of Ruina Delivers a Different Kind of Deck Builder". Game Wisdom. 2021-09-09. Retrieved 2024-04-29.
  5. ^ Tack, Daniel. "Library Of Ruina Might Be The Best Game You Sleep On This Year – Don't". Game Informer. Archived from the original on August 17, 2021. Retrieved 2024-04-29.
  6. ^ "Studio EIM | 스튜디오 EIM | 게임 음악 & 사운드 스튜디오". eimnew (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-04-29.
  7. ^ "Mili official website". Mili Official Website. Retrieved 2024-04-29.
  8. ^ To Kill a Living Book -for Library Of Ruina- by Mili, 2021-10-29, retrieved 2024-04-29
  9. ^ Mili - String Theocracy / "Library of Ruina" theme song. Retrieved 2024-04-29 – via www.youtube.com.
  10. ^ "Library Of Ruina Soundtrack on Steam". store.steampowered.com. Retrieved 2024-04-29.
  11. ^ Romano, Sal (18 January 2024). "Library of Ruina coming to PS4, Switch on April 25 in Japan and Asia, this spring worldwide". Gematsu. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  12. ^ Fuller, Alex (25 April 2024). "New Release Round-Up (April 25, 2024)". RPGamer. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  13. ^ a b "Library of Ruina". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
  14. ^ a b Wacholz, Charlie (2024-04-25). "Review: Library Of Ruina (Switch) - Potential Aplenty, But Just Doesn't Stack Up". Nintendo Life. Retrieved 2024-05-24.
  15. ^ a b Musgrave, Shaun (May 24, 2024). "SwitchArcade Round-Up: Reviews Featuring 'Library of Ruina', Plus Today's New Releases, News, and Sales". TouchArcade. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
  16. ^ a b Hashimoto, Kazuma (May 18, 2024). "Review: Library of Runia Is a Challenging Switch Experience". Siliconera. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
  17. ^ Daniel Tack (2021-08-17). "Library Of Ruina Might Be The Best Game You Sleep On This Year – Don't". Game Informer. Retrieved 2024-01-18.
  18. ^ Alice Bell (2021-09-10). "TFI Friday: 3 new indie games for back-to-school season". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 2024-01-18.
  19. ^ Russell Troxel (2021-08-22). "Library of Ruina Review". Retrieved 2024-01-18.
  20. ^ Barker, Richard (2021-09-12). "Library of Ruina Review". TheXboxHub. Retrieved 2024-04-29.