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Densetsu no Ogre Battle - The March of the Black Queen (Japan / NP)

Super Nintendo (SNES)
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1993
86
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✪ Reviewed on September 13, 2024
80

Quest's cult tactical RPG, with majestic staging and an original alignment system. Long, dense, still spellbinding today.

Your verdict
Category
Tactics 1 player 12+
Description
Epic tactical strategy in which an army liberates a continent from a tyrant empire. Published by Quest, released in Japan in 1993. Deployment of varied units on maps, automated battles, allegiances and morale influencing outcomes and complex political scenario. Original Japanese version of the Ogre Battle series, a masterpiece by Yasumi Matsuno.

Densetsu no Ogre Battle - The March of the Black Queen review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
"Masterful"
From the pen of Hitoshi Sakimoto and Masaharu Iwata, the music deploys a medieval orchestra of rare nobility and breadth, worthy of a grand martial epic. Each liberation battle rises to the scale of a fresco, supporting the strategy with gravity. This symphonic finesse already heralded the duo's genius.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Mild"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Technical info
💾1,2 MB 📅12/03/1993
Published by Quest

Densetsu no Ogre Battle - The March of the Black Queen (SNES) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

A 1993 Quest Super Famicom tactical RPG, Japan-exclusive on original cartridge, founder of the Ogre Battle line and of the Yasumi Matsuno sensibility before Vagrant Story and FFXII. The NP version (Nintendo Power, on-demand writing on a Nintendo flashable cartridge) is particularly rare and sought after. Intact boxed CIB with cardboard sleeve and illustrated manual is a target for Matsuno collectors and the cote climbs hard.

Is Densetsu no Ogre Battle - The March of the Black Queen still worth playing in 2026?

Densetsu no Ogre Battle - The March of the Black Queen is a tactical RPG by Quest, sitting between real time strategy and JRPG. Composed units move across a strategic map and trigger automated battles whose outcome depends on placement and moral alignment. The Ogre Battle political fresco is sweeping and the multiple endings encourage replays, provided the player accepts a calm pace and a demanding system. Recommended to fans of dense SRPGs and grown up fantasy frescoes.

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