The Misadventures of Tron Bonne

Each Servbot is given a personality and a few other traits, and the player's investigation and interaction is rewarded with money for the loan, additional parts and weapons for the Gustaff, or other assistance.

Servbots also play a role during the adventure and action stages (limited to seven, three or one, depending on the type, generally one leading the others, and called "sniper"), assisting Tron in her quest by ransacking houses or defeating minor threats as the situation and their individual skills warrant.

A Servbot's skills may be increased by putting him through training exercises (attack and speed), going on missions (brains) or by disciplining him in the Torture Room (thus lowering the sloth level); in both cases, the effect of the action is determined by a minigame.

The Bonne family's leader, Teisel, seeks the ancient Nakkai Ruins to try and uncover Diana's Tear, a gigantic and highly valuable Refractor.

After rendezvousing with younger brother Bon, the two are subdued and captured by Glyde, a rival air pirate in the service of loan shark Lex Loath.

Seeing no other options, Tron suits up in a custom Gustaff mecha and, along with her army of 40 identical Servbots, begins her quest to pay the ransom through any means possible.

The Bonnes at first try to attack it with the Gesselschaft's weapons, but this has almost no effect, and the Colossus' return fire causes Tron to be very seriously injured and Teisel to get thrown overboard.

While in flight, the favorite Servbot accidentally throws out a giant Refractor won from Loath with the trash, causing Tron and Teisel to panic and force a pit stop to search for it.

A Capcom representative said that although a release was not confirmed yet, the staff would to announce it in a short time due to the popularity of the first Mega Man Legends game.

[2] In June 1999, Capcom announced that Tron Ni Kobun would come packed with a trial demo version of the then-upcoming Rockman DASH 2 (Mega Man Legends 2).

The demo included in the North American version would much more closely resemble the final content of the game, consisting of three selectable events, two being boss fights (against Tron's crabbot and a giant ape-ish Reaverbot, which can be considered as "easy" and "hard", respectively) and the last one the full exploration of the Forbidden Ruins).

[11] GamePro said in an early review, "For fans of Mega Man Legends and those looking for a lighthearted action title with some variety, Tron is a stong rental – just don't expect to be thrilled for days on end.