Shin Megami Tensei Iv Apocalypse Undub 3ds — Portable
The True Apocalypse: Why You Need the SMT IV: Apocalypse Undub on 3DS
For JRPG enthusiasts, the Nintendo 3DS represents a golden era. It hosted some of the most ambitious titles in the genre, and few are as revered as Atlus’s Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse (known as SMT IV: Final in Japan).
- The Battle Intro: Instead of a low-energy "Prepare to die," you get a visceral "Kurae!" (Take this!) from your demon party.
- Dagda’s Dialogue: The Irish god of death, voiced in Japanese, sounds far more detached and alien, enhancing the horror of your divine pact.
- The Soundtrack: Because the undub doesn’t touch the BGM (composed by Ryota Kodama and Toshiki Konishi), you get the best of both worlds: atmospheric synth-and-rock battle themes with crisp, authentic voice clips.
- On your 3DS SD card, navigate to:
sd:/luma/titles/
- Create a new folder named with the Title ID of Apocalypse. For the US version, the ID is
0004000000190E00 (Double-check online for your region).
- Inside that folder, create two subfolders:
romfs and exefs.
- Extract your undub patch. You will see a
romfs folder containing sound and movie folders. Copy the contents of the patch’s romfs into the romfs folder on your SD card.
- If your patch includes an
exefs folder with a code.ips file, copy that to the exefs folder on your SD card.
- Enable game patching: Hold Select while powering on your 3DS to enter Luma config. Check "Enable game patching." Press Start to save.
- Launch the game. When Nanashi speaks his first line (and it’s in Japanese), you have succeeded.
Original Audio: Full Japanese voice acting for all story cutscenes and battle dialogue. shin megami tensei iv apocalypse undub 3ds portable
Why Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse Matters The True Apocalypse: Why You Need the SMT