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Spyro the Dragon (Europe / Australia)

PlayStation
🇩🇪 🇬🇧 🇪🇸 🇫🇷 🇮🇹
Reviewed in
1998
86
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✪ Reviewed on July 23, 2023
80

Spyro the Dragon is an exceptional quality Insomniac Games PS1 3D platformer. The little purple dragon traverses varied magical worlds with sumptuous movement freedom. Enchanting art direction, memorable Stewart Copeland soundtrack. One of PS1's finest 3D platformers.

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Category
Platformer 1 player 3+
Description
Original Insomniac 3D platformer, where dragonet Spyro frees his statue-frozen elders across five realms of the dragon world. Created by Insomniac Games and Sony Computer Entertainment, released in 1998 in the United States, Australia, Asia, Europe and Japan with Shokai Genteiban edition under the Spyro the Dragon title. Over thirty open-exploration 3D worlds, dragonet with horn charge, glide and fire breath, over eighty dragons to free and Stewart Copeland orchestral soundtrack. Multi-regional edition with Shokai Genteiban under the Spyro the Dragon title.

Spyro the Dragon review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
3/5
Music
"Memorable"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,44 GB 📅23/10/1998
Published by Sony Computer Entertainment

Spyro the Dragon (PS1) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The first entry of the console's dragon mascot, a colorful 3D platformer praised for its fluidity and welcoming open world, a bright counterpoint to the era's grittier heroes. Still fairly widespread in the West, its interest lies in this origin status of an emblematic late-PlayStation figure rather than scarcity. A prime piece for fans of good-natured 3D platforming.

A cult cover

Standing proud, the little purple dragon with golden horns sizes up a colorful kingdom threatened by Gnasty Gnorc: the Western cover plays the heroic mascot and the promise of an open world. Vivid hues and a conquering stance convey the hero's energy and carefree spirit. Likeable and clear, it launched one of the great faces of the PlayStation stable.

Is Spyro the Dragon still worth playing in 2026?

Released in 1998 on PS1, Insomniac Games' project lays the foundations of the colourful and accessible 3D platformer with astonishing mastery. The little dragon crosses open worlds full of collectibles, the breath and headbutt system stays limpid and the warm pastel art direction has not aged. The camera and jumping demand real patience, and the PS1 version loses a touch of finesse compared to recent remasters. Recommended today for families, for 3D platformer fans and for Insomniac Games nostalgics curious about the studio before Ratchet defined its later identity globally.

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