The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel

12 Games Like Persona 5 If You’re Looking for Something Similar

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You can’t really talk about the JRPG genre without at least mentioning Persona at this point. The series has carved a name out for itself in the industry by melding the dungeon-crawling, turn-based JRPG combat system with a fun dating/life sim element that progresses along a rather strict timed schedule. There’s nothing quite like it, but here are a few games like Persona if you’re looking for something similar.

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Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth

Digimon in general has a a bit in common with Persona, and Cyber Sleuth is clearly inspired by the popular JRPG series. With a bright and vibrant art style, you assume the role of an amateur hacker who discovers the ability to battle and capture Digimon.

Throughout the game you have to hop between the real world and the Digital world, exploring dungeons in a similar manner to something like Persona 4. Additionally, there’s a deep and complex system for capturing and evolving Digimon, letting you craft your team from a selection of monsters from the beginning of the series. It’s through this blend of real world exploration and sidequesting, and Digital world battling and dungeon crawling that Cyber Sleuth evokes Persona. However, it doesn’t contain the same level of character development and time management that Atlus’ series does. Still, Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth is a great game to pick up if you want another expansive and colorful world to explore for hours on end.

Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse

Persona, of course, has a lot in common with its mothership series Shin Megami Tensei, and the latest entry SMT IV: Apocalypse is another stellar title. Picking up right at the end of the original SMT IV, Apocalypse follows a brand new character in the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Tokyo.

The main SMT series has much more of an emphasis on gameplay and demon capturing, whereas Persona is more focused on story. While this is true with Apocalypse, the game does feature a surprisingly engaging story with a memorable cast of main characters. If you’ve played Persona 5 you’ll feel right at home with all of the systems in Apocalypse, like exploiting enemies’ weaknesses and bargaining with demons to get them to join your team. There’s plenty to enjoy with the title as well, as you’ll easily have 60-100 hours of gameplay on just your first run through, and luckily scaling difficulty levels make it one of the most accessible titles of the SMT series. If you need a little bit more to scratch that Persona itch, this may just be the best next step.

The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel

Trails of Cold Steel feels like a fusion between The Legend of Heroes series and Persona, retaining many of the thematic and combat elements of the former along with some of the social aspects of the latter. The title casts you as Rean Swcharzer, a new student at the Thors military academy. Rean ends up being selected for a special class, trained to handle important missions for the Erebonian Empire. Your fellow classmates are the various party members for the game, and they each play an important role in the story. To go along with this, you build a relationship with each by spending your free time with them while at the school. Doing this boosts that respective character’s link level, unlocking new abilities in combat, similarly to how the Persona social link system works.

On top of this the game advances with a calendar system, having you live out each day through classes, hanging out with classmates, or doing special operations. The system isn’t as stringent as Persona, but it does give the game a sense of time passing all the same. Combat remains the tried and true formula of The Legend of Heroes series, with a big emphasis on positioning and special attacks. Any Persona fan will find a lot to love in Trails of Cold Steel, with its engaging social system, mature storyline, and fleshed out characters.

Conception II

Conception II is certainly a bit of an odd game, although it does have quite a few similarities with the Persona series. You take control of Wake Archus, a teenager who discovers he bears the mark of the Star God on his hand. You attend a high school that doubles as a training ground for demon hunters, and become a celebrity known as “God’s Gift,” due to the high amount of ether in your body. Now here’s the catch, through an exercise known as “classmating” Wake can create Star Children with his classmates, all of which can join the party. There’s plenty of relationship building and character development to see while at the school, in addition to shopping and equipping your party.

When not spending time in your school life, Conception II is filled with lengthy, complex dungeons to explore. Your party is a combination of classmates and Star Children, with each one specializing in different skills and attacks. These dungeons can be fairly generic at times, but there’s still a certain level of challenge to combat. Conception II has quite a few anime tropes and fan service, but there’s still a lengthy Persona-esque JRPG underneath.

Rune Factory: A Fantasy Harvest Moon

The Harvest Moon games are almost entirely simulation, but the Rune Factory sub-series helps add a little bit of fantasy flair into the mix. If you enjoy the time management and social sim aspects of the Persona series, Rune Factory might be a good fit. You play as Raguna, a young amnesiac boy who wanders into the town of Kardia and collapses. He’s saved by a girl named Mist, who eventually offers him a house on her plot of land with farmland. You have to spend your time caring for your farm, making crops, fishing, interacting with the townsfolk, and exploring the nearby cave system. Unlike other Harvest Moon games, Rune Factory has you battling monsters in the caves with a Zelda-like combat system. As you beat them you can make friends with monsters, who will offer you valuable goods and services in turn.

The storyline unfolds by clearing different sections of the cave and beating the boss, which will uncover more of Raguna’s memories. There’s plenty of choice as to how you spend each day in the game, however, and you can eventually marry one of the women from Kardia. There are four handheld Rune Factory games, and two more on consoles as well, if you want even more to play.

Tokyo Mirage Sessions #FE

There’s probably no other game around that matches Persona quite like Tokyo Mirage Sessions does. After all, the project is the long-awaited crossover between the Fire Emblem and Shin Megami Tensei series. In truth, however, the title shares a lot in common with Persona in terms of story, characters, and even gameplay. Tokyo Mirage Sessions takes place in modern day Tokyo, and focuses on a group of teenagers trying to become pop idols. The group finds out about evil beings known as Mirages that steal an energy known as Performa from humans, that saps them of the will to live.

Your group befriends a group of friendly Mirages who also happen to be characters from the Fire Emblem series. These Mirages function almost exactly like Persona, giving each character specific elemental and physical abilities. Battles also focus on exploiting enemies weaknesses, and opening them up to powerful cooperative session attacks from your characters. Also matching the style of Persona, Tokyo Mirage Sessions puts a big emphasis on the interpersonal relationships of your parties, and building their bonds. The colorful, pop-infused aesthetic also gives the game an entirely unique feel of its own. It’s one title that’s a no-brainer for any fan of Shin Megami Tensei or Persona.

Xenoblade Chronicles

Xenoblade Chronicles may not have many similarities to Persona on its face, but there are a few things the two titles share. First and foremost, is how the story focuses on the growing relationships of its main cast. Xenoblade tells an epic, sweeping tale about humanity’s survival against an antagonist machine race known as the Mechon. You play as Shulk, a young mechanic that inherits the power of a mysterious blade known as the Monado, which can help him see the future. Combat plays out with an almost MMO-like system that makes you stay active, prompting different moves and special abilities as battle flows.

Xenoblade features a system based around building your parties’ bonds, both in battle and out. Taking certain actions in battle or making certain choices in conversations will boost Shulk’s affinity with another party member. Various points around the world marked with a handshake symbol, will allow you to view a scene relating to a particular character and their history or relationship with Shulk. You have to have a certain amount of affinity with each character to view each scene, creating a lot of optional side content to explore. Xenoblade Chronicles is truly one of the most memorable JRPGs of the last decade with fast and exciting combat, realistic characters, and an enthralling main narrative, and the relationship system alone is enough to attract any Persona fan.

Final Fantasy Type-0

Final Fantasy Type-0 is yet another of the few RPGs that share a common thread with the Persona series, especially in terms of school life and time management. Type-0 focuses on the Agito Cadets, an elite faction of military students in the Dominion of Rubrum. When the country is invaded by the Milates Empire, the cadets are called into action to help save the Dominion. You play as all twelve of the Agito Cadets, building your three-persona party however you wish. The title has combat somewhat similar to Final Fantasy VII: Crisis Core in real-time, with a heavy focus on quick action.

Type-0 is split between venturing out into the world of Orience on missions, and spending time at Akademia, the elite military school of Rubrum. Between missions, you have a set amount of free time, and each action you undertake subtracts some of that time. You can talk to your classmates to learn more about them, head out onto the world map to do sidequests, and boost your skills with classes. Type-0 may not have the everyday life simulation of the Persona series, but the school setting and time management definitely give it a similar vibe, along with everything you’d expect out of a Final Fantasy title.

Fire Emblem: Three Houses

Fire Emblem started experimenting more heavily with the idea of character bonding and marriages in Awakening, and it’s elevated even further in Three Houses. This game feels like a proper cross between Persona and Mass Effect, and it’s all the better for it.

The bonds you get to make between your characters feel nuanced and meaningful, and it’s truly a pleasure watching them grow over the course of the story. While Three Houses doesn’t quite have the flashy turn-based combat system that you might enjoy from Persona 5, the tactical strategy combat is still insanely fun and will keep you engaged for tens of hours on end.

Danganronpa

Okay so this isn’t a JRPG, but hear me out. All three Danganronpa games feature an incredible cast of characters, and isn’t that the whole point of Persona in the first place? Every character is truly unique and outstanding in their own way, which is impressive, especially when you consider the fact that they all come off as one-dimensional and tropey at the beginning.

Danganronpa is a murder mystery visual novel that will keep you guessing every step of the way, while also getting you attached to its entire cast. Just don’t get too attached. You never know who’s gonna drop dead next.

The World Ends With You

The World Ends With You is like the hipster cousin of Final Fantasy. Set in modern-day Tokyo (Shibuya, to be precise), TWEWY follows a ragtag group of teenagers who must compete in a deadly game, and the prize is to either be brought back to life, or transcend and become opponents for other players in future games.

TWEWY is distinct in that it highlights Shibuya’s graffiti and street culture, and gives off a very cool and laidback vibe overall. The turn-based combat system doesn’t hold up quite as well today, but it’s the story and characters that really make up the heart and soul of the game. It’s difficult not to get attached to its colorful cast, and this is a game that will stick with you for a long time to come.

13 Sentinels: Aegis Rim

It’s not Persona, but the premise alone comes pretty damn close. 13 Sentinels: Aegis Rim follows a group of high school students who must work together to stop a world-ending catastrophe from happening. There are time travel shenanigans, implied romantic connections, and lots of friendship and bonding.

13 Sentinels is part visual novel, part RTS, where you get to move your mechs around a very messy-looking map to blow up robots and other kaijus. We acknowledge that the gameplay might not be for everyone, but again, this is one of those games where every character will come off as tropey or one-note at first, but end up being extremely compelling as you get to know them.

And those are our picks for the best games like Persona 5 if you’re looking for something similar.


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Author
Hayes Madsen
A connoisseur of all things RPG related, and always looking for the artistic expression in gaming. His love of Gundam is only matched by his love of Pizza. Playing Games Since: 1991 Favorite Genres: RPGs, JRPGs, Strategy,
Author
Zhiqing Wan
Zhiqing is the Reviews Editor for Twinfinite, and a History graduate from Singapore. She's been in the games media industry for nine years, trawling through showfloors, conferences, and spending a ridiculous amount of time making in-depth spreadsheets for min-max-y RPGs. When she's not singing the praises of Amazon's Kindle as the greatest technological invention of the past two decades, you can probably find her in a FromSoft rabbit hole.