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Golden Sun - La Edad Perdida (Spain)

Game Boy Advance
🇪🇸
Reviewed in
2002
88
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✪ Reviewed on October 4, 2025
82

Golden Sun La Edad Perdida, Spanish version of the Lost Age. Same excellence as the English edition, texts in Spanish. The Golden Sun sequel remains a masterpiece in any language.

Your verdict
Category
RPG 1 player 12+
Description
Direct sequel to Golden Sun by Camelot, published by Nintendo in Spain in November 2002. Felix continues the alchemy lighthouse quest in a second chapter revealing the saga's true stakes. Maritime travel, link cable save transfer, over 50 Djinn and expanded Psynergies. Spanish version of Golden Sun: The Lost Age.

Golden Sun - La Edad Perdida review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
"Captivating"
Extending the splendour of the first, the adventure unfurls a vaster world, grander summons and ever more intricate settings. Technical mastery weds a dazzling elemental enchantment. This visual extravagance, polished and generous, remains a showcase of 2D art on the machine.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Technical info
💾0,01 GB 📅08/11/2002
Published by Nintendo

Golden Sun - La Edad Perdida (GBA) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Spanish localization of Golden Sun The Lost Age, distributed by Nintendo Ibérica under the La Edad Perdida title, with a full adaptation of the Camelot terminology into Castilian usage. Nintendo Ibérica run was short compared with the English and German versions, the European cardboard box is fragile, and an ES complete copy with Weyard map stays harder to find in clean shape than the contemporary English version sold in parallel in Spain.

Is Golden Sun - La Edad Perdida still worth playing in 2026?

The Lost Age picks up right after the first Golden Sun by following the other camp and closes the Weyard storyline with rare ambition for a GBA sequel. The world map opens up broadly by boat, the Djinn collection is finally rounded out and Psynergy is used in puzzles that often turn devious. The whole game is longer, denser and technically even more confident than the first. Essential for anyone who finished Golden Sun and a fine landing spot for anyone wanting a portable JRPG with rare scope.

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