Compara los precios de OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0 en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Square Enix. Publicado por Square Enix. Lanzado el 4/12/2025. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: RPG.

The JRPG community groaned when Square Enix announced a full-priced mobile port. After 70-plus hours in Orsterra, that groan turns into a quiet admission that this one actually worked.

I went in skeptical. Octopath Traveler 0 is, at its core, a console rework of Champions of the Continent, a mobile gacha title most Western players never touched. That origin story should be disqualifying. It is not, and it took me embarrassingly long to stop looking for the seams. The structural shift from the previous two entries is the most important thing to understand before you buy. Instead of juggling eight parallel storylines whose characters barely acknowledge each other, you build a single custom protagonist, pick one of eight starting jobs (Warrior, Scholar, Hunter, Dancer, Thief, Merchant, Apothecary, or Cleric), and pursue a focused two-thread narrative: the hunt for the divine rings and the rebuilding of your razed hometown, Wishvale. The tighter cast of primary companions, including the upbeat architect Stia, the hunter Phenn, and the priestess Laurana, gets real character development, the kind that rewards paying attention. The three main antagonists are genuinely hateable in distinct ways, from a debt-slavery schemer to a murderous playwright. If the first Octopath left you cold because the party never felt like a party, this fixes that. The gacha mechanics are entirely gone. What replaced them is a cleaner, better-paced RPG with a dark opening chapter and a story that earns its runtime, which reviewers have noted can push past 70 hours on the main path alone. The combat is where the game makes its loudest argument. The Break system from the earlier titles returns intact: scan enemy weaknesses, chip away shield points, stun them, then unload. What is new is the expanded eight-character party with a front row of four active fighters and four reserves in the back line. Characters in the back row passively regenerate HP and SP every turn, which fundamentally changes resource management. Rotating a drained Scholar to the back for two turns while a Warrior covers them, then swapping back in for a break-punish combo, turns boss fights into layered puzzles rather than attrition slogs. The BP system, which lets you stack and spend boost points to amplify attacks or abilities, remains unchanged from Octopath Traveler II, and that is the right call. Your class choice for the protagonist is flexible too: once you master your starting job by spending JP earned in battle, you can switch to another, and mastered skills become equippable Masteries that other party members can use. Over 30 recruitable characters each carry unique jobs unavailable to the protagonist, so party composition depth is real and stays interesting well past the midgame. There are genuine problems. The first few hours are rough, with sparse environments and dungeon layouts that feel clearly inherited from a mobile game built around limited screen real estate. Asset quality in certain areas is noticeably lower than Octopath Traveler II, and the English dub sounds compressed enough that the Japanese audio track is the better default. The expanded roster of 30-plus recruitable characters is a double-edged sword: the main trio gets the writing attention, but most of the wider cast exists in optional side quests that do not feed back into the central story in any meaningful way. The overarching villain plot is straightforward good-versus-evil material with some derivative fantasy scaffolding, and the mid-game difficulty spikes awkwardly in places, occasionally forcing equipment-grinding sessions that feel like friction rather than challenge. The Wishvale town-building layer is enjoyable and provides tangible benefits like a dojo that levels up benched characters passively, but players expecting something deep will find it functional rather than ambitious. For RPG fans who bounced off the original Octopath because the stories felt disconnected, this is the entry that fixes the core complaint. The combat system is the best in the series. The writing is grittier and more cohesive than its predecessors. The rough edges are real but rarely game-breaking. Come in after the prologue, commit through the slow opening hours, and Octopath Traveler 0 eventually stops feeling like a port and starts feeling like a proper entry. Monika, Scout Team

OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0

OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0

4 dic 2025Square Enix
GamerScout opina

The JRPG community groaned when Square Enix announced a full-priced mobile port. After 70-plus hours in Orsterra, that groan turns into a quiet admission that this one actually worked.

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I went in skeptical. Octopath Traveler 0 is, at its core, a console rework of Champions of the Continent, a mobile gacha title most Western players never touched. That origin story should be disqualifying. It is not, and it took me embarrassingly long to stop looking for the seams. The structural shift from the previous two entries is the most important thing to understand before you buy. Instead of juggling eight parallel storylines whose characters barely acknowledge each other, you build a single custom protagonist, pick one of eight starting jobs (Warrior, Scholar, Hunter, Dancer, Thief, Merchant, Apothecary, or Cleric), and pursue a focused two-thread narrative: the hunt for the divine rings and the rebuilding of your razed hometown, Wishvale. The tighter cast of primary companions, including the upbeat architect Stia, the hunter Phenn, and the priestess Laurana, gets real character development, the kind that rewards paying attention. The three main antagonists are genuinely hateable in distinct ways, from a debt-slavery schemer to a murderous playwright. If the first Octopath left you cold because the party never felt like a party, this fixes that. The gacha mechanics are entirely gone. What replaced them is a cleaner, better-paced RPG with a dark opening chapter and a story that earns its runtime, which reviewers have noted can push past 70 hours on the main path alone. The combat is where the game makes its loudest argument. The Break system from the earlier titles returns intact: scan enemy weaknesses, chip away shield points, stun them, then unload. What is new is the expanded eight-character party with a front row of four active fighters and four reserves in the back line. Characters in the back row passively regenerate HP and SP every turn, which fundamentally changes resource management. Rotating a drained Scholar to the back for two turns while a Warrior covers them, then swapping back in for a break-punish combo, turns boss fights into layered puzzles rather than attrition slogs. The BP system, which lets you stack and spend boost points to amplify attacks or abilities, remains unchanged from Octopath Traveler II, and that is the right call. Your class choice for the protagonist is flexible too: once you master your starting job by spending JP earned in battle, you can switch to another, and mastered skills become equippable Masteries that other party members can use. Over 30 recruitable characters each carry unique jobs unavailable to the protagonist, so party composition depth is real and stays interesting well past the midgame. There are genuine problems. The first few hours are rough, with sparse environments and dungeon layouts that feel clearly inherited from a mobile game built around limited screen real estate. Asset quality in certain areas is noticeably lower than Octopath Traveler II, and the English dub sounds compressed enough that the Japanese audio track is the better default. The expanded roster of 30-plus recruitable characters is a double-edged sword: the main trio gets the writing attention, but most of the wider cast exists in optional side quests that do not feed back into the central story in any meaningful way. The overarching villain plot is straightforward good-versus-evil material with some derivative fantasy scaffolding, and the mid-game difficulty spikes awkwardly in places, occasionally forcing equipment-grinding sessions that feel like friction rather than challenge. The Wishvale town-building layer is enjoyable and provides tangible benefits like a dojo that levels up benched characters passively, but players expecting something deep will find it functional rather than ambitious. For RPG fans who bounced off the original Octopath because the stories felt disconnected, this is the entry that fixes the core complaint. The combat system is the best in the series. The writing is grittier and more cohesive than its predecessors. The rough edges are real but rarely game-breaking. Come in after the prologue, commit through the slow opening hours, and Octopath Traveler 0 eventually stops feeling like a port and starts feeling like a proper entry.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaTurn-Based StrategyTown BuildingBreak MechanicJob SystemPrequelSilent ProtagonistFront-Back Row CombatRoster Management

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows® 11
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
AMD Radeon™ RX 470 / NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 960
Processor
AMD Ryzen™ 3 2300X / Intel® Core™ i3-8100

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OS
Windows® 11
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
AMD Radeon™ RX 5600XT / NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 1070 / Intel® Arc™ A580
Processor
AMD Ryzen™ 5 2600 / Intel® Core™ i5-8400

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Square Enix
Distribuidora
Square Enix
Fecha de lanzamiento
4 dic 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0?

OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0 está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0?

OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0 se lanzó el 4 de diciembre de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0?

OCTOPATH TRAVELER 0 fue desarrollado por Square Enix.