Disgaea 4 A Promise Unforgotten deepens the formula with Valvatorez and even more gigantic post-game content. Absurd political satire, increasingly rich mechanics. The best Disgaea on PS3 for many.
Your verdict
Category
Tactics1 player12+
Description
Korean version of Nippon Ichi Software's Disgaea 4 (Magye Jeongi) bringing back Valvatorez and his team to the Netherworld. Published by NIS America, released in Korea in July 2011. Offbeat tactical RPG with absurd humor, diversified classes, in-depth Item World mode, multiple endings based on choices, and polished Korean localization. Korean version.
Magye Jeongi Disgaea 4 review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
A once-feared vampire now bound by an absurd promise, Valvatorez rises against a corrupt demonic government. Behind the unbridled humour, the tale celebrates loyalty, conviction and dignity with unexpected sincerity. This spirited satire extends the saga's narrative verve with panache.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Optimizing an army of demons to the extreme, reshuffling your assembly to unlock bonuses and spells, then heading back to farm the Item World feeds a tactical loop that devours itself. Each combo of mechanics opens new peaks of power. Repetition lurks for those allergic to farming, but the inventiveness of the system holds strategists for a very long time.
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Massive"
The map-edit system and returning Item Worlds blow up an already colossal endgame, where levels and stats are pushed far past reason. Following Valvatorez's promise and training his Prinnies is merely the starting point: the real adventure lies in endless min-maxing. That offbeat humor and tactical density make it a respected pillar of the tactical RPG.
Technical info
💾2,9 GB📅25/08/2011
Published by NIS America
Magye Jeongi Disgaea 4 (PS3) price, value & rarity
The Korean edition of Disgaea 4, a Nippon Ichi tactical RPG of dizzying depth, released in very low volume in a niche market for this Japanese genre. Its appeal lies in this marked Korean scarcity, far tighter than the Western and Japanese editions, making it a target for collectors of SRPGs and Asian pressings. An import piece hard to assemble complete.
Is Magye Jeongi Disgaea 4 still worth playing in 2026?
Disgaea 4 remains for many the peak of Nippon Ichi's tactics saga on PS3, and it carries high everything that defines the series' identity. Its absurd political satire, led by the sardine-phobic Valvatorez, keeps an offbeat humour that lands. The dizzyingly rich tactical combat system allows an insane power climb, and the gigantic post-game content promises hundreds of hours to anyone who loves optimising units to the point of absurdity. The HD transition shows off the sprites nicely. For the fan of unbridled tactical RPG, it is a safe bet.