Suikoden is a Konami JRPG masterpiece based on the 108 heroes Chinese novel. Recruiting an army of 108 distinct characters, customizable base and fast turn-based combat system. Mature and touching political narrative. A foundational PS1 JRPG classic.
Your verdict
Category
RPG1 player12+
Description
Cult Japanese Konami RPG, where the heir of the Five Imperial Flames hero gathers the 108 Stars of Destiny to overthrow the Scarlet Moon Empire. Created by Konami, released in 1995 in Japan and Asia, 1996 in the United States, 1997 in Europe with revision under the Suikoden title. Six-character team turn-based combat, over a hundred eight recruitable characters, personal fortress castle management, narrative duels and Miki Higashino orchestral soundtrack. Multi-regional edition with revision under the Suikoden title.
Suikoden review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
Forced to betray his father's empire to join the rebellion, a young hero gathers a hundred and eight fates into a political fresco of surprising maturity. War, loyalty and agonising choices carry real weight here. This epic ambition, rare on the console, laid the foundations of a cult saga.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Rallying one by one the hundred and eight heroes scattered across the world, building your fortress and watching it come alive as recruits arrive weaves a progression where every encounter renews the hunt for companions. The brisk battles and the wartime plot reward your advance. The game is short and a touch rigid, but this living collection and its growing army pull you along to the very end.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Gathering the 108 Stars of Destiny turns the adventure into a vast character hunt, where each recruit fleshes out a base to develop and the battle cast. The already hearty main quest is doubled by countless optional encounters. That sprawling collection, a Suikoden signature, founds a longevity JRPG fans savour.
The Western and Asian release of the first Suikoden, Konami's RPG founding a cult saga around the quest for the 108 Stars and a dense political plot. The Western run remains findable, while the Asian version is markedly rarer. Its interest lies in this status as the root of a revered JRPG line, and in the scarcity that varies by provenance.
Is Suikoden still worth playing in 2026?
Released in 1995 on PS1 in Japan and later in the West, Konami's project lays the foundations of one of the finest choral frescoes in Japanese role playing. The silent hero must gather one hundred and eight stars of destiny to free a corrupt empire, and the six member party combat is enriched with duels and army battles. The pixel art direction and Miki Higashino's music keep their charm. The random encounters and the 2D modelling have aged. Recommended today for fans of choral JRPG and for Konami devotees curious about a major studio signature on Sony's first home console hardware globally.