パンツァーワールド用語・人名説明. Panzer Dragoon Saga website (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 27 October 2000. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
A fact from Panzer Dragoon II Zwei appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 6 April 2023 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
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This game contains a save feature, and I am pretty sure the original did not. I would add this bit of info if I found a reliable source.--SkiDragon (talk) 03:16, 2 June 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"The gameplay features the player moving an aiming reticle (representing the dragon's laser and Lundi's gun) and shooting enemies while the dragon travels through 3D environments on a fixed track, with levels having alternate pathways which influence gameplay." - this sentence gets a little complicated and the parenthesis aren't needed; consider "The player controls an aiming reticle representing the dragon's laser and Lundi's gun, shooting enemies while the dragon travels through 3D environments on a fixed track. Levels can have multiple pathways, and the dragon grows stronger over the course of the game based on the player's score." (that seemed a little more important to the gameplay summary then just the branching pathways.
"Gameplay is mostly identical to the original Panzer Dragoon; the player controls a flying dragon and its rider through an aiming reticle that can be moved over the whole screen with the D-pad, analog pad, or Saturn Mouse, with enemies appearing across four quadrants tracked by a radar in corner of the screen." -> "Gameplay is mostly identical to the original Panzer Dragoon; the player controls an aiming reticle for a flying dragon and its rider as they move through the level. Enemies can appear in four quadrants of the screen, and are tracked by a radar display in the upper left corner of the screen. The reticle can be controlled with the D-pad, analog pad, or Saturn Mouse
"There was also an awareness that the Saturn was failing commercially and the team would need to potentially end the series within the system's lifetime." -> "The team felt that the Saturn was failing commercially, and that should therefore work on both games simultaneously in order to complete them within the system's lifetime."
"As with Panzer Dragoon the art design drew inspiration from the work of Jean Giraud" - second "as with" in a row; maybe "The art design drew inspiration from the work of Jean Giraud, as it had for Panzer Dragoon"
"The team were more familiar with the Saturn hardware by this point, so Yoshida achieved technical elements that were impossible with the first game." -> "The team were more familiar with the Saturn hardware then the had been when developing the original game, and so were able to incorporate technical elements that they had been unable to in the first game."
"The transition from ground to air was difficult due to only having one scrolling layer" -> "The transition from ground to air was difficult to display to the player as the Saturn could only show one scrolling layer at a time"
You have one sentence about the dragons in Development paragraph 5, but then more in paragraph 6; these should probably be together.
The fifth paragraph is about gameplay elements, while the sixth is about technical graphics design. The dragon is a central element of the game and is mentioned repeatedly in the fourth paragraph, too. -Bryan Rutherford (talk) 04:12, 6 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]
"Zwei added ethnic elements" - not clear what "ethnic elements" is meant to convey in this context
"The music also changed in that the branching path system" - this feels like it should go with the first sentence, since the lack of precise level lengths is part of why the music wasn't prerecorded, right?
"An arrange album" - I know this is how 90s/2000s sites refer to this type of album, but it reads easier to modern readers as "An album of arrangements"
I think it's more of an Engrish issue than a chronological one; this is still, for better or worse, the standard term (in Japanese) for such records. I'm hesitant to replace the correct standard term with something we made up, but I agree that it probably sounds strange to a reader not familiar with the term. I wish we could wikilink it! Unsure whether this is really for the better. -Bryan Rutherford (talk) 04:12, 6 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Release- when were these two shows that the game was shown at? Also, this first paragraph reads like a bullet list of entries; try to link them together a bit.
"Originally announced for a 2021 release date, the Zwei remake's release was postponed to an unspecified date in June of that year." - seeing as it's now 2023, this is a strange sentence- did it come out or not? And when?
Reception as a whole reads as a series of reviews, one per sentence. It would be better divided up to have a section on gameplay, a section on graphics, etc., with similar review opinions combined together rather than siloed into their own sentences.
Good to go on your updates; I've made a couple small changes, rather than post them here. The reception section change is a larger request; it matches the recommendations at WP:VG/REC for how to write reception sections. It's not necessarily required for GAN, so since everything else is done, I'm going to go ahead an promote without it, but keep it in mind for future articles, especially if you plan on bringing any video game articles to FAC. --PresN22:25, 6 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
... that Panzer Dragoon II Zwei features visuals inspired by the work of Jean Giraud, a villain inspired by Dune's Baron Harkonnen, and a fictional language? Source: [1]: "There is a character in Dune, Count Hakone? Possibly, I'm not sure what his English name is, but the image we drew on for the emperor relied on him a lot." [2]: "もちろん、しゃべる言葉は、前作同様パンツァーオリジナル!" ("Of course, the language spoken is the Panzer Original, the same as in the previous work!")