Summary

  • The Phantom X offers a return to Persona 5 roots, showcasing similar mechanics and storytelling.
  • The game satisfyingly captures the essence of a mainline Persona title despite potential concerns about monetization.

Playing is like being wrapped in a warm blanket with a hot cup of te🔥a on a cold winter’s day. Sure, its themes are dark, and the story goes to harrowing places, 🌠but its flashy visuals, exquisitely composed music, and coming-of-age tale fills my heart with an unbridled sense of joy. Sadly, the same can’t be said for the game’s many spin-offs.

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Metaphor: ReFantazio is tied for th🐭e most critically-acclaimed release of the year.

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With a bar set so high by the original, not one of the Phantom Thieves follow-up adventures really hit the mark for me. So, while 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Persona 5: The Phantom X looked like a return to the original game’s roots, forgive m👍e if I was a little cautious ahead of a global release for the mo🔴bile title.

At 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Tokyo Game Show this year, I was lucky enough to beat the regularly-90-minute lines to get 15 minutes of hands-on time with The Phantom X, and while my time with the game left me with plenty of ques♓tions, I cam👍e away feeling cautiously optimistic.

It Certainly Seems Like More Persona 5

My preview began with two choices: Story Mode or Battle Mode. I opted for story mode and was swiftly greeted with th𝐆e stunning intro movie, and as it played out, I couldn’t help but grin like an excited schoolchild. Yes, I’ve watched it on YouTube a dozen times already, but this was the precursor to the latest entry in one of my favorite f༒ranchises of all time. I was excited.

As the intro concluded, I was thrust into a classroom scene at Kokatsu Academy featuring the game’s new protagonist as the all-too-familiar Persona 5 music rang out. ꦫI was truly back, and so wasꦛ that sense of joy I felt when I first picked up the game all those years ago.

I worked my way through a series of Japanese-language cutscenes, meeting the series’ latest animal companion, an owl, and things began to take shape. Much like Persona 5, a mysterious app appears on the protagonist’s phone, and as a suspicious character boards the train, the player character is left with no choice but to click the button on their cell, thus beginning their first journ🐭ey into the Metaverse.

Here We Go Again

Persona 5_ The Phantom X - Opening Animation featuring protagonist with Joker

Similar to everything else I’d experienced up to this point, the Metaverse and Mementos shared stark similarities to Atlus’ mainline console title. No surprise, since I imagine a number of assets and mechanics are lifting directly from the likes of Persona 5, Royal, and Strikers.

Set in an underground metro station, shadows freely roamed,🍬 posing a threat to my character and what would later become my party. After yet another series of cutscenes in which Ruferu, th💫e anthropomorphic owl, and myself became overwhelmed by the enemy, the moment I was waiting for occurred — the awakening.

Noജ matter how many timꦜes I’ve seen it, will never not be cool.

Complete with the usual crunchy guitar riff, the protagonist ripped their mask off, prompting a swift outfit change and the summoning of their brand-new Persona, something which, no matter how many times I’ve seen it, will never not be cool. I then battled with thre✅e of the series’ most iconic enemies, Jack Frost.

The Phantom X features all of Persona 5’s core battle mechanics.🔯 My fight played out like one typical of the series and included me summoning my Persona to deal elemental damage, knocking the enemies down, and triggering the famed “One-More”, which in turn allowed me to perform an All-Out Attack with Ruferu. Atlus has nailed its battle system over the years, and rightly, they didn't try to change things for t🍸he mobile title.

Ticking The Right Boxes

Persona 5_ The Phantom X - Opening Animation new cast of characters

The Phantom X, at least fro⭕m the short time𒆙 I spent with it, completely satiated my desire for another mainline Persona title.

After playing through its introduction, it's clear thꦯe game will have a heavy emphasis on tellingꦚ another compelling story. And, although my Japanese reading comprehension is limited, The Phantom X has all of the stellar storytelling hallmarks you’d expect. I may not have been able to tell much of what the characters were saying to each other, but I could see the path the game was heading down, and it was enough to hook me.

While it was developed by a company external to Atlus, Black Wings Game Studio, many of Persona 5’s original development team oversaw its completion. This meant that any concerns that The༒ Phantom X may lose some of 5’s trademark flash were immediately nullified, and you can see Atlus’ influence from the get-go.

The Phantom X has all of the ste🦄llar storytelling hallmarks you’d expect.

However, even though I enjoyed what I’d pl🐬ayed, I still left with some worries.

What🧜 makes the original Persona games so great is their ability to immerse you. They’re the type of experience that you sit down to play for an hour, look up, and six have flown by. Sadly, The Phantom X’s ꦚmechanics won’t allow for that.

It’s a mobile game, and it needs to ꧑be monetized somehow. Though the calendar system fundamentally remains in The Phantom X, much of it is time-gated or paywalled, meaning if you want to continue your adventure, you’re either forced to wait or pay up.

The Phantom X is a gacha game, too. I didn’t get to play enough to find out how new party members will be unlockꩵed and become available for use in battles, but it seems the game will heavily rely on banners and gacha rolls to acquire them. How this affects the flow of the story remains a mystery to myself, but I sincerely hope it doesn’t hamper things in pursuit of making more money.

Bring It To The West

phantom x 2

With a Japanese release of Persona 5: The Phantom X now imminent, the question remains of whether it’ll make 🌄its way West.

Traditionally, Western gamers aren’t as hot on mobile titles as their Japanese counterparts, something which was abundantly clear to me riding through Tokyo’s wonderful rail system. However, with the success of games like Genshin Impact and Zenless Zone Zero, plus the continued growth of the 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Persona franchise in this part of the globe, it seems inevitable.

Despite having never played a gacha game before, the signs are promising, and it’s a game that I’ll be diving into 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:if and when it heads over.

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Your Rating

Persona 5 Royal
5.0/5
Top Critic Avg: 94/100 Critics Rec: 98%
Released
March 31, 2020
ESRB
﷽ M for Mature: Blood, Drug Reference, Partial Nudity, Sexuꦉal Themes, Strong Language, Violence
Developer(s)
Atlus, P-Studio
Publisher(s)
Atlus
Engine
Proprietary Engine

WHERE TO PLAY

DIGITAL
PHYSICAL

Persona 5 Royal adds even more to Atlus' hit RPG, including an extra semester, a new Palace to take on, and two new confidants. Two new endings add to the Phantom Thieves' story, and you'll be able to hang out in the Thieves' Den.