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Eiyuu Densetsu - Sora no Kiseki the 3rd - Kai - HD Edition (Japan)

PlayStation 3
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
2013
82
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✪ Reviewed on October 15, 2023
74

Eiyuu Densetsu Sora no Kiseki the 3rd HD concludes the Sky trilogy with Kevin Graham. Unique dungeon structure, deep revelations on Liberl/Septian Church lore. Indispensable for saga fans.

Your verdict
Category
RPG 1 player 12+
Description
HD port of the third installment in Falcom's Kiseki trilogy concluding the Sora arc with Kevin Graham and the Children of the Sky. Published by Sony, released in Japan in January 2012. HD graphics, full voice acting, Kevin Graham as protagonist, final revelations on the Gospels' Guardians, and conclusion of the Liberl trilogy. Japanese version.

Eiyuu Densetsu - Sora no Kiseki the 3rd - Kai - HD Edition review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
"Masterful"
Signed by the Falcom Sound Team jdk, the music unfurls a repertoire of wild generosity, from the fiery rock battle theme to moving town melodies. Each region gains a memorable sonic colour, carrying a sprawling story with rare coherence. This melodic richness, celebrated by fans, remains a peak of the JRPG.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Mild"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Technical info
💾5 GB 📅27/06/2013
Published by Sony

Eiyuu Densetsu - Sora no Kiseki the 3rd - Kai - HD Edition (PS3) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Eiyuu Densetsu Sora no Kiseki the 3rd Kai HD Edition, the Japanese remaster of the Trails in the Sky trilogy's epilogue, with no Western physical PS3 edition and thus an essential import link to close the cycle. It appeals to those gathering the whole founding trilogy boxed, at its source. Its desirability rests on this physical regional exclusivity and its role as the final piece of a revered saga rather than a tiny run.

Is Eiyuu Densetsu - Sora no Kiseki the 3rd - Kai - HD Edition still worth playing in 2026?

Trails in the Sky the 3rd closes the Liberl trilogy by adopting a fresh viewpoint, that of Kevin Graham, a priest of the Septian Church. Its dungeon structure, more linear and combat-focused, contrasts with its elders, but its many Doors offer a trove of side stories that deeply illuminate the lore and characters of the whole saga. It is a chapter designed for the faithful more than for newcomers. The language barrier persists on PS3. But for anyone who followed Estelle and Joshua, this rich and moving conclusion remains essential.

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