Compara los precios de Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Zerodiv. Publicado por PQube. Lanzado el 26/4/2024. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Adventure, RPG, Strategy.

A ruthless PSP-era dungeon crawler reborn on PC, built for players who want their party-building decisions to actually hurt when they get them wrong.

I've spent enough time with old-school DRPGs to know exactly who Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition was made for, and it is absolutely not me expecting a gentle on-ramp. This is a remaster of a 2008 PSP title, and Zerodiv has preserved its thorny, uncompromising design almost completely intact. If you walked in expecting Etrian Odyssey's careful tutorialisation or Wizardry 8's modern ergonomics, adjust your expectations sharply downward before you hit the infirmary. The genuine strength here is party composition, and it deserves credit. Picking from 10 races, including Dwarves, Fairies, and Felpurrs, and slotting them into 15 courses like Summoner, Lord, and Kunoichi gives you a matrix of decisions that actually matters. Alignment, Good through Evil, gates certain courses and also affects the affinity your party members share with each other. Misalign your Diablons and Celestians and your affinity rating tanks, which in turn locks you out of Gambits, the multi-character combo skills that can hit all enemies or guarantee a clean escape. That layered cause-and-effect is the game at its best. Front row versus back row placement, stat thresholds to qualify for a course, even gender locks on four of the fifteen courses, all of it feeds into a pre-dungeon planning phase that genuinely rewards deliberate thinking. Once you are actually inside the dungeons, the ceiling drops fast. Over 75 floors spread across the game sound generous, but the level design relies heavily on randomised map pools rather than hand-crafted layouts, and the repetition becomes visible within a few hours. The handful of fixed labyrinths are exceptions. Combat is turn-order, command-assignment, watch-the-results, which is fine for the genre, but the surrounding systems age poorly. You will appraise items you have identified before, repeatedly. The menu hierarchy for moving gear between storage, your bag, and individual party members is the kind of friction that felt acceptable on a portable device in 2008 and grates on PC in 2024. The Anniversary Edition does add adjustable difficulty modifiers that tweak damage and XP rates, and a boss-replay arena for targeted grinding, but reviewers and the Steam community are right to call out that quality-of-life work stops well short of what the underlying design actually needs. For DRPG veterans, particularly anyone with fondness for the Wizardry lineage or players who bounced off the original PSP version and want a cleaner shot at completion, there is a real game here. The alchemy system, where materials gathered in dungeons get appraised, converted via recipes, and turned into crafted gear, is genuinely more cost-efficient than the shop, and figuring out that loop is satisfying. The school framing, Particus Academy as your home base, keeps the tone light and the character art is charming. The music inside dungeons builds appropriate tension. None of that disguises the fact that the narrative is paper-thin and the setting is cosmetic dressing rather than a world with depth. Bottom line for anyone searching right now: if you are new to the genre, Class of Heroes 2G is widely considered the better entry point with more quality-of-life adjustments. If you specifically want the first game and are comfortable managing obtuse menus as part of the fun, this PC port is the most accessible way to play it. Diego, Scout Team

Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition

Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition

26 abr 2024ZerodivPQube
GamerScout opina

A ruthless PSP-era dungeon crawler reborn on PC, built for players who want their party-building decisions to actually hurt when they get them wrong.

PC
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €9.98

Comparar precios(0 tiendas)

Cargando precios...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Historial de precios

Historical low
€9.9810 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€9.76€10.52€11.27€12.0310 Jun15 Jun19 Jun24 Jun28 Jun
Tracking prices since 10 Jun 2026
Create alert

Capturas y multimedia

Acerca de Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition

I've spent enough time with old-school DRPGs to know exactly who Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition was made for, and it is absolutely not me expecting a gentle on-ramp. This is a remaster of a 2008 PSP title, and Zerodiv has preserved its thorny, uncompromising design almost completely intact. If you walked in expecting Etrian Odyssey's careful tutorialisation or Wizardry 8's modern ergonomics, adjust your expectations sharply downward before you hit the infirmary. The genuine strength here is party composition, and it deserves credit. Picking from 10 races, including Dwarves, Fairies, and Felpurrs, and slotting them into 15 courses like Summoner, Lord, and Kunoichi gives you a matrix of decisions that actually matters. Alignment, Good through Evil, gates certain courses and also affects the affinity your party members share with each other. Misalign your Diablons and Celestians and your affinity rating tanks, which in turn locks you out of Gambits, the multi-character combo skills that can hit all enemies or guarantee a clean escape. That layered cause-and-effect is the game at its best. Front row versus back row placement, stat thresholds to qualify for a course, even gender locks on four of the fifteen courses, all of it feeds into a pre-dungeon planning phase that genuinely rewards deliberate thinking. Once you are actually inside the dungeons, the ceiling drops fast. Over 75 floors spread across the game sound generous, but the level design relies heavily on randomised map pools rather than hand-crafted layouts, and the repetition becomes visible within a few hours. The handful of fixed labyrinths are exceptions. Combat is turn-order, command-assignment, watch-the-results, which is fine for the genre, but the surrounding systems age poorly. You will appraise items you have identified before, repeatedly. The menu hierarchy for moving gear between storage, your bag, and individual party members is the kind of friction that felt acceptable on a portable device in 2008 and grates on PC in 2024. The Anniversary Edition does add adjustable difficulty modifiers that tweak damage and XP rates, and a boss-replay arena for targeted grinding, but reviewers and the Steam community are right to call out that quality-of-life work stops well short of what the underlying design actually needs. For DRPG veterans, particularly anyone with fondness for the Wizardry lineage or players who bounced off the original PSP version and want a cleaner shot at completion, there is a real game here. The alchemy system, where materials gathered in dungeons get appraised, converted via recipes, and turned into crafted gear, is genuinely more cost-efficient than the shop, and figuring out that loop is satisfying. The school framing, Particus Academy as your home base, keeps the tone light and the character art is charming. The music inside dungeons builds appropriate tension. None of that disguises the fact that the narrative is paper-thin and the setting is cosmetic dressing rather than a world with depth. Bottom line for anyone searching right now: if you are new to the genre, Class of Heroes 2G is widely considered the better entry point with more quality-of-life adjustments. If you specifically want the first game and are comfortable managing obtuse menus as part of the fun, this PC port is the most accessible way to play it.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayercontroller-supportcloud-savestier:indieDRPGParty Composition DepthAlchemy CraftingAlignment SystemGambit SkillsPSP RemakeMenu-HeavyWizardry-likeVanguard-Rearguard

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
WindowsR 10+ 64bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1050
Processor
intel(R) Core(TM) i3-8100
Sound Card
DirectSound

Recomendados

Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

Sigue explorando

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition.

Reseñas y valoraciones

No hay valoraciones disponibles

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Zerodiv
Distribuidora
PQube
Fecha de lanzamiento
26 abr 2024

Alerta de precio

¡Recibe un aviso cuando el precio baje de tu objetivo!

Crear alerta

Más de Zerodiv

Compra mejor: guías útiles

Preguntas frecuentes sobre Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition

¿Cuánto cuesta Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition?

El precio de Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition cambia a menudo y varía según la tienda, la edición y la región. La tabla de precios en vivo de esta página compara las ofertas más baratas en stock de tiendas de claves de confianza como Eneba y Kinguin, para que siempre veas el precio más bajo actual antes de comprar.

¿Dónde puedo comprar Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition más barato?

Compara los precios de Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition en todas las tiendas verificadas en la tabla de precios de esta página. Listamos las ofertas de claves y tiendas más baratas en stock, actualizadas con frecuencia, para que siempre veas la mejor oferta actual antes de comprar.

¿En qué plataformas está disponible Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition?

Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition?

Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition se lanzó el 26 de abril de 2024.

¿Quién desarrolló Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition?

Class of Heroes: Anniversary Edition fue desarrollado por Zerodiv y publicado por PQube.