Gensou Suikoden III (Japan / Gensou Suikoden-sai Hakkou Kinen)
PlayStation 2
🇯🇵
Reviewed in 2002
84
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✪ Reviewed on November 12, 2024
78
Third Suikoden with an original narrative system letting players experience three protagonists with crossing perspectives on the same events. The political world and 108 recruitable characters faithful to series tradition are excellent. A high-quality JRPG for genre fans.
Your verdict
Category
RPG1 player12+
Description
Konami's third Suikoden, released in 2002 (Japan) and 2003 (West). The first 3D entry and the first to introduce the Trinity Sight System: three protagonists, three crossing viewpoints. The fate of the 108 Stars unfolds across a political tapestry unusually mature for the series.
Gensou Suikoden III review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
Blending orchestra, world sonorities and traditional instruments, the music of the Suikoden series wraps its political frescoes in a broad, nuanced emotion. Each nation has its melodic colour, between martial nobility and melancholy. This refined sonic richness, deeply narrative, remains the soul of this great JRPG saga.
Told through the eyes of three protagonists on opposing sides, the conflict is revealed from every angle, with no absolute hero or villain. War, prejudice and the burden of command gain a rare nuance. This bold choral structure makes the fresco one of the richest and most adult in the RPG.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Recruiting an army of one hundred and eight characters while following the story from several points of view weaves a fresco where you want to know every thread. Building your castle, gaining companions and evolving your runes keeps the collecting going. The pacing is slow and the battles repetitive, but this narrative scope and this recruitment quest keep a stubborn hold.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Gathering 108 Stars of Destiny through a tapestry told from three protagonists' eyes unfolds a JRPG of rare scope, where every recruit enriches both the castle and the tale. The long, choral main quest is doubled by a roster of characters and abundant side quests. That narrative density, a hallmark of the series, earns the title a stubborn reputation as a great RPG.
A limited Japanese edition of Gensou Suikoden III, offered as a first-print boxset and an anniversary version celebrating the saga, packed with collectible items. Markedly rarer than the standard run, it appeals to demanding fans of the Konami line, its value measured by the complete set. Its desirability rests on this scarcity and the special edition's completeness.
An underrated gem
Telling a war through the eyes of three different protagonists: Suikoden III dares a bold narrative structure, served by its legendary roster of one hundred and eight recruits. Eclipsed by the era's RPG giants and hampered by sometimes dated tech, it keeps a faithful community. A grand choral tale for those who prize writing over flash.