Tapping the rhythm to push a tribe of black dots forward is one of the most brilliant ideas ever born on a PSP. Monumental bosses and a tribal score make Patapon an utterly unique hypnotic experience.
Your verdict
Category
Rhythm1 player3+
Description
The Patapon, a warrior tribe of round black figures, march to the beat of the drums the player strikes to issue commands and conquer new lands. Published by Sony Computer Entertainment, released in Europe in March 2008. Four rhythmic commands for attack, march, defence and summon, warriors to customise, monumental bosses. Multilingual version.
Patapon review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
2/5
Story
★★★★★
"Classic"
Black silhouettes on colourful backgrounds, a rhythmic tribe and pared-down design: the game imposes a minimalist aesthetic of striking singularity. The sharp contrast and the drum-rhythm animation compose an immediately recognisable identity. This art direction, audacious and stylish, has no equivalent.
At the very heart of the game, the chanted tribal songs pace every action to the spellbinding sound of "Pata-pata-pata-pon". The music becomes gameplay: obeying the drum means advancing the army in a hypnotic trance. This brilliant idea, fusing rhythm and strategy, makes the whole irresistible singularity of the game.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Giving orders to an army of little warriors by drumming out rhythms: this marriage of rhythm game and strategy creates a hypnotic, deeply satisfying loop. Feeling your troop advance, attack and dance in time delivers a unique joy. Original, stylish and spellbinding, a brilliant concept with an unforgettable art direction that grabs you from the very first beat.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Beating the drum on the right rhythm to command your tribe, chaining combos of orders and pushing through tense levels settles into a hypnotic loop where every victory calls for the next. Evolving your warriors, hunting rare materials and reaching for Fever sustain the progression. The rhythmic repetition can wear, yet this fusion of music and strategy holds a unique, tenacious grip.
Patapon, a singular blend of rhythm and strategy by Pyramid and Sony, where you command a tribe to the beat of a drum in an inimitable silhouette art direction. Harder to gather than the big PSP titles, its desirability rests on this acclaimed creative originality and a lasting demand, the Japanese and Korean pressings being rarer. A prime piece for fans of original concepts on the console.
A cult cover
An army of tiny warriors reduced to a single eye and a silhouette stands out in crisp shadows against a flat field of bright color: the graphic identity is instant, almost a silkscreened poster. This pared-down stance, born of the sharpest Japanese design, conveys the game's marriage of strategy and rhythm. Singular and elegant, it looks like nothing else on the console.
Is Patapon still worth playing in 2026?
Patapon on PSP is one of the most brilliant ideas ever to come out of a PSP. Hitting the rhythm to advance a tribe of black dots, monumental bosses and the tribal soundtrack make for an absolutely unique hypnotic experience. Pyramid's title, signed Hiroyuki Kotani for Sony, breathes Japan Studio creativity with an inimitable silhouette art direction. An absolutely essential classic today.