Summary
- Modern JRPGs retain the heart of classics like Final Fantasy 6 & Chrono Trigger while evolving.
- Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes delivers on its promise as a spiritual successor to Suikoden.
- Chained Echoes respects players' time with deliberate encounters, interconnected world, and emotional storyline.
There’s something comforting about a classic JRPG. The turn-based combat, the pixel art towns, the grand tales of chosen heroes setting off to save the world with a sword in one hand and a menu full of spells in the other. But the beauty of the genre today lies in how much it's evolved without letting go of its roots.
8 RPGs With The Best Stories, Ranked
While some RPGs excel in their gameplay and combat, these titles blend the best of it all by also providing amazing stories.
Modern JRPGs might look sleeker, play smoother, and feel snappier, but deep down, many of them still beat with the same heart as Final Fantasy 6 or Chrono Trigger. Some are love letters, others bold reinterpretations. But all of them know exactly where they came from.
6 Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes
The Spiritual Sequel That Actually Exists
Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes
- Released
- April 23, 2024
- ESRB
- E10+ For Everyone 10+ Due To Fantasy Violence, Language, Mild Suggestive Themes
- Developer(s)
- Rabbit and Bear Studios
- Genre(s)
- RPG
- Platform(s)
- PC, PS5, PS4, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S
Most “spiritual successors” ride on nostalgia, promise big, then vanish into vaporware oblivion. Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes actually delivered. Created by the original minds behind Suikoden, it brings back large-scale party building, political drama, and yes, a full 100+ recruitable characters, each woven into a surprisingly grounded conflict.
It plays like a greatest hits compilation of everything Suikoden fans missed. Six-character turn-based combat, base-building, pixel art character sprites over lush 3D environments, and a score by Motoi Sakuraba that gives it the gravitas of a PS2-era epic. Even the way battles scale in scope over time feels like a deliberate callback. And somehow, despite the sheer number of characters, many of them still get meaningful story beats. That alone is a miracle.
5 Bravely Default 2
The Job System Is Still Better Than Most Day Jobs
Bravely Default 2
- Released
- February 26, 2021
Where modern JRPGs try to reinvent the wheel, Bravely Default 2 just polishes it till it shines. It brings back the job system seen in Final Fantasy 5, but lets players stack abilities, passives, and roles with a freedom that’s dangerously addictive. One second it’s a turn-based fantasy, the next it’s a party optimization simulator.
The “Brave” and “Default” mechanics give battles surprising depth. Players can gamble multiple turns at once or bank them for a massive counterattack, turning otherwise standard encounters into tense little tactical puzzles. Combine that with a fairy-tale world, a soundtrack that flips from whimsical to orchestral banger in seconds, and boss fights that require genuine strategy, and this one sticks hard with old-school fans who want their combat crunchy and their rewards earned.
4 Lost Sphear
From the People Who Just Really Missed Chrono Trigger
Lost Sphear
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- October 12, 2017
Lost Sphear doesn’t try to hide what it is. It wears its love for Chrono Trigger on its sleeve, from the semi-active combat system to the muted emotional tone that creeps in once players start noticing how broken the world really is. Made by Tokyo RPG Factory, a studio literally founded to revive old-school JRPG design, it carries an oddly melancholic vibe throughout.
10 PS2 JRPGs That Deserve More Love, Ranked
These PS2 JRPGs may have flown under the radar, but they still offer unforgettable stories, unique combat, and timeless charm.
The combat system builds on I Am Setsuna, letting players freely move characters within a battlefield to maximize their AoE attacks. But where it hits hardest is in its core mechanic: using memories to rebuild lost parts of the world. The idea of forgotten places only coming back when remembered plays beautifully into the story’s themes of identity and loss. It’s not perfect, but it’s sincere, and that counts for a lot.
3 Chained Echoes
Made By One Guy, Hits Like A Whole Studio
Chained Echoes
- Released
- December 8, 2022
- ESRB
- M17+ For Mature 17+ Due To Sexual Themes, Strong Language
- Developer(s)
- Matthias Linda
- Genre(s)
- RPG
- Platform(s)
- PC, PS4, PS5, Switch, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S
There are indie projects, and then there’s Chained Echoes. Built almost entirely by a single developer, this game manages to echo Final Fantasy 6, Xenogears, and Chrono Trigger, yet still feels like its own thing. From the sweeping pixel art to the tight, status-heavy combat, it’s clear this wasn’t made to copy the classics, but to belong among them.
33 JRPGs On Steam With The Best Combat System, Ranked
There are a ton of amazing JRPG experiences on Steam and some of them feature stellar combat. Here are some of the best.
There’s no filler. Every encounter feels deliberate, gear progression is tied to exploration rather than grind, and the world is refreshingly interconnected. Mechs play a big role in both combat and traversal, and the pacing never slouches. Instead of bloated dialogue or hours of exposition, Chained Echoes gets to the point, delivers its emotional punches, and keeps moving. It respects players' time, and somehow, still gives them that 40-hour JRPG satisfaction.
2 Sea of Stars
When Combat Feels Like Rhythm, And Nostalgia Feels New
Sea of Stars
- Released
- August 29, 2023
- ESRB
- E10+ For Everyone 10+ Due To Fantasy Violence, Mild Blood, Mild Language
- Developer(s)
- Sabotage
- Genre(s)
- RPG
- Platform(s)
- Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, Xbox One
Sea of Stars looks like it came straight out of the SNES golden age, but it doesn't just ride the pixel art wave. It reinvents turn-based combat with timed inputs that keep players engaged every second. Think Super Mario RPG, but smoother, with synergy attacks that depend on positioning, enemy type, and who’s left standing.
The story plays out like a bedtime myth come to life, but there’s real emotional depth under all the celestial flair. It connects directly to The Messenger, but works perfectly on its own. There’s also fishing, cooking, puzzles, secret bosses, and one of the best JRPG soundtracks in years, featuring guest tracks by Yasunori Mitsuda. This is the kind of game that makes longtime fans feel like kids again, and introduces new players to what made the genre magical in the first place.
1 Octopath Traveler
A Game Where Eight Tales Are Better Than One
Octopath Traveler
- Released
- July 13, 2018
- ESRB
- T for Teen: Blood, Fantasy Violence, Mild Language, Suggestive Themes, Use of Alcohol
- Developer(s)
- Square Enix
- Genre(s)
- JRPG
When Octopath Traveler first dropped, it didn’t just revive pixel art. It redefined it. That HD-2D look has since become a style of its own, but this was the one that started it. Eight characters, eight stories, and a sprawling land of snowy peaks, sunlit fields, and morally grey decisions.
Each character’s tale plays out separately, but they all converge into a deeper mystery by the end. Combat is fast but tactical, built around breaking enemy defenses and exploiting weaknesses. The Boost Point system rewards players who time their attacks smartly instead of just mashing “Fight.” And with every character able to pick up a secondary job, party synergy becomes a sandbox of experimentation. It’s a blend of Final Fantasy 5, Live A Live, and a whole lot of charm.
Best JRPG Games On PS4, Ranked
The JRPG genre was alive and well on the PS4 with mega-hit titles like Persona 5. Here are some of the best you can play according to Metacritic.