Chained Echoes is a love letter to 16-bit JRPGs, but stuffed with modern ideas: no random battles, an overheat gauge that paces turns, mechs joining the fray. Long, generous, carefully written by a tiny team. A genuine surprise.
Your verdict
Category
RPG1 player12+
Description
On the continent of Valandis, companions with intertwined fates try to halt an endless war. Published by Deck13, released worldwide in 2022. Turn-based combat with no magic points, an overdrive gauge to balance, battle mechs to pilot and a gorgeous 16-bit style.
Chained Echoes review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Massive"
An avowed homage to sixteen-bit JRPGs, the adventure keeps their generosity without the dead weight: a vast world to roam, abilities to unlock and a system for crafting attacks that invites experimentation. Side quests and optional zones flesh out an already ample tale. That balance of nostalgia and modernity explains the esteem it quickly earned.
A heartfelt nod to old-school RPGs, this journey turns every major showdown into a puzzle of tempo: the overheat gauge forbids skill-spamming and demands measured pacing. Big foes shift stances, open resistances or punish over-eagerness, turning party strategy into a calculated dance rather than a plain trade of damage.
An underrated gem
A game built almost single-handedly, it landed in late 2022 amid a flood of higher-profile JRPGs. There's the paradox: its 16-bit homage hides a modern combat system, free of magic points and built around a momentum gauge to balance, plus pilotable mechs. Anyone mourning the genre's golden age will find a surprisingly sharp love letter here.
Is Chained Echoes still worth playing in 2026?
Chained Echoes is such a controlled tribute to the 16-bit JRPG that you forget it is the work of a single developer. Its turn-based system without magic points, built around an overdrive gauge you must balance, brings real tactical freshness, and the mech-combat sections vary things pleasantly. The ambitious story sometimes sprawls and the pacing has dips. But the pixel art is gorgeous and the generosity of the content impresses. For anyone who loves classic RPGs given a modern polish, it is one of the finest recent surprises.