A tactics RPG that dares a system of squads programmed before battle, then lets you watch the ballet unfold. The Vanillaware art is sumptuous, and the class depth richly rewards the patience to optimize.
Your verdict
Category
Tactics1 player12+
Description
You rally an army to liberate the kingdom of Fevrith from a tyrant's grip. Published by Atlus, released worldwide in 2024. Tactical battles where you set up units in advance, overworld exploration and lavish hand-drawn animation.
Unicorn Overlord review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
The Vanillaware touch bursts from every screen: sumptuous 2D sprites, gilded illumination, finely animated heroes across teeming battlefields. This old-world refinement, worthy of a medieval manuscript, lends the tactics game a visual nobility rare in the genre.
For this sweeping tactical fresco, Basiscape under Hitoshi Sakimoto unfurls orchestral pomp worthy of the Ogre Battle lineage he helped define. Heroic fanfares, solemn marches and finely chiseled national themes give the reconquest of Fevrith a constant epic surge. The contrapuntal richness drapes every skirmish in a grandeur that flatters strategist and music lover alike.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
Building squads, programming their behaviors then watching the ballet play out in real time blends planning and action with rare elegance. The depth of the classes amply rewards the patience to optimize, and exploring the world map paces it all without diluting it. Vanillaware's hand-drawn animation is timeless. The learning curve asks for commitment, but what richness it yields.
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Five nations to liberate, a map filling up with optional tactical battles and a web of relationships between dozens of units to deepen: the adventure never settles for the bare minimum. The scripted auto-battles and the management of a whole army pleasantly stretch the journey. That tactical density, served by polished craftsmanship, explains the enthusiasm it stirred.
The real-time tactics crystallize in clashes where assembling your units, ordering attacks and heals, then reading initiative decides everything against cunning generals. Enemy commanders fuse unique skills and formations that force a rethink of each squad. The classic elegance of this modern Ogre Battle heir elevates every strategic duel.
An underrated gem
Released into a spring 2024 logjam of big titles, Unicorn Overlord slipped off the radar fast despite its brilliance. Vanillaware deploys dazzling hand-drawn animation and a singular tactical twist: you program your units in advance, then watch your plans play out. That blend of strategy and spectacle is unlike anything else. Worth rediscovering for its refinement, perfect for tactics fans.
Is Unicorn Overlord still worth playing in 2026?
Unicorn Overlord proves Atlus and Vanillaware can still break new ground. Its battle system, where you compose squads and program their behaviour before the clash, blends planning and real-time action with rare elegance. Overworld exploration structures the pace without diluting it. Visually, Vanillaware's hand-drawn animation stays among the medium's most sumptuous, timeless by nature. The learning curve asks for some patience, but the tactical depth rewards the investment. For strategy fans, it is one of the most striking and lasting releases of recent years, and it will not age soon.