Tokyo Xanadu
-- You can usually get an S-Rank (or at least a high A) on a first attempt at a stage just by collecting all treasure chests and killing as many enemies as possible with the person they’re weak against (You’ll see “Element Kill” pop up).
-- A high chain bonus influences your stage score. The crates littered everywhere are intended for you to keep your chain alive in-between monsters. In many stages, you’ll need to dart into side rooms to get treasure chests or hit switches. Leaving some crates – or enemies - intact in rooms with a path split will let you continue the chain when you pass back through the room again. The chain bonus seems to cap at 200, though, so if you get that high, you don't need to worry about reaching 300.
-- Don’t neglect purchases of healing items whenever you get the chance. Bosses have a lot of HP and can whittle yours down faster if you’re not used to their patterns.
-- The special attacks are confusing because they’re named similarly (EX skill, X-Strike, X-Drive).
- X-Strike is your super screen-clearing portrait attack. The HUD indication you have one ready is the yellow hexagon with the curvy lightning bolt in it. Perform one by pressing your “Lock-on” and “Dodge” buttons at the same time.
- EX Skill is another powerful attack, the nature of which varies based on the character. The HUD indication you have one ready is the red circle with an E in it to the right of your health. You are invulnerable when performing one.
- X-Drive temporarily summons your active partner to the field to assist you for a short period of time. The HUD indicator you have one is the bar labelled X-Drive that fills up to 100%. Don’t worry about getting the right partner to hit weaknesses, as ALL attacks during that period are considered to be weaknesses.
-- Money will be a little tight in the game at first until you can replay stages. There are recipes you can get that produce items that sell for more than you can buy their ingredients, but redoing a stage doesn’t take that long and gives you item rewards.
-- At the arcade, there's a decent "Prevent all status ailments" accessory for 20,000 Arcade medals. Getting that many is a pain though. Fishing has the highest potential payout, but it requires somewhat of a bank of medals to play, as the higher levels are increasingly difficult to break even on. Other games are easier, but pay out less. Some games give notes for the character profile pages, though.
-- Don't worry too much about trying to fill in the character profile pages on your first playthrough, it requires at least two, so just pick who you want to spend time with.