BlazBlue Central Fiction concludes the main saga with complete roster, most accomplished combat system and lore finally resolved. The best BlazBlue, reference 2D vs fighter of its generation.
Your verdict
Category
Fighting2 players12+
Description
Fourth and final entry of the BlazBlue saga, Western release, closing the narrative arc of Ragna the Bloodedge inside the Boundary. Published by Aksys Games in North America and PQube in Europe, released in November 2016 in Europe and North America. Thirty-six playable fighters including Es and Mai Natsume, Arcade mode split into two paths, full storyline in story mode with visual novel, Survival mode and online matches.
BlazBlue - Central Fiction review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
Hand-drawn high-definition sprites of rare finesse, flamboyant effects and polished anime design: Arc System Works signs a peak of 2D fighting. The fluidity of the animation and the brilliance of the colours elevate every clash. This graphic virtuosity, lively and refined, perpetuates the studio's excellence.
Signed by Daisuke Ishiwatari, the music electrifies every duel with heavy metal riffs and flamboyant vocal themes, like "Rebellion". Each fighter has their own supercharged rock anthem, sticking to the fury of the clashes. This blazing sonic identity, in the lineage of Guilty Gear, galvanises brawling fans.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Massive"
The apotheosis of the BlazBlue saga, Central Fiction crowns the story with a sprawling mode that resolves years of plot, alongside a plethoric roster of teeming mechanics. Arcade, challenges, missions and online play feed long-term mastery. That generous conclusion makes it a centerpiece for devotees of the genre.
Technical info
💾15 GB📅01/11/2016
Published by Arc System Works
BlazBlue - Central Fiction (PS3) price, value & rarity
The Western edition of the conclusion of the main BlazBlue saga, wrapping the series' sprawling plot for its faithful. A niche fighter with a modest run, released late, it is less widespread than the blockbusters and sought by 2D versus fans wanting to close the collection. Its interest lies in this endpoint status of a cult series rather than wide distribution.
Better with friends
A wildly rich 2D fighter, where each character plays by such different rules that learning a new opponent feels like discovering another game. The competition rewards fine mastery and reading intentions, in duels of joyful nerviness. Demanding for newcomers, the skill gap can sting, but local versus stays clear and deep, ideal for evenings among enthusiasts.
Is BlazBlue - Central Fiction still worth playing in 2026?
Central Fiction closes BlazBlue's main saga and stands as its high point. The roster reaches its widest span, the combat system its richest and best-balanced form, while the long-obscure plot finally finds its resolution. The 2D animation by Arc System Works keeps an exemplary finesse that does not age. For anyone drawn to 2D versus fighting, it is both the best entry point and the finest conclusion. The online community is thinning on PS3, but the colossal solo content alone justifies diving in even today.