Compare Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.. Published by Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.. Released on 9/25/2017. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure. Metacritic score: 80/100.

Fifty hours of murder mysteries, courtroom chaos, and a cast that will make you feel terrible for liking them, V3 is the series at its sharpest, if you can stomach where it ends up.

I went in expecting Danganronpa to do what it always does: make me care about a character, then kill them in front of me. V3 does that, but it keeps raising the stakes on every axis until the whole structure starts groaning under its own weight, and somehow that is exactly the point. This is a visual novel with active trial gameplay baked in, and the split between daily school life and Class Trials is the backbone of the whole experience. Daily Life lets you explore the Ultimate Academy for Gifted Juveniles in first-person, spend free time bonding with classmates through friendship events, collect Monocoins, and buy gifts at the school store to raise bond levels and unlock trial skills. It is breezy, funny in a deeply twisted way, and the quieter moments make the violence that follows hit harder. The Class Trials are where V3 really separates itself. Each one runs three hours or more, cycling through Non-Stop Debates, Mass Panic Debates where characters talk over each other and you have to shoot down weak arguments with truth bullets earned from crime scene investigation, and a string of minigames including a substantially improved Hangman's Gambit that functions as a memory puzzle. There is also a new wrinkle this time: the ability to deliberately use Lie Bullets during debates, letting you build false arguments to manipulate the courtroom. It sounds like a gimmick but it feeds directly into V3's central theme of truth versus lies, and the writing is sharp enough to make it feel meaningful rather than cosmetic. The murder cases themselves are better constructed than in prior entries, with fewer leaps of logic requiring you to just accept what the game tells you. The cast is genuinely excellent. Protagonist Kaede Akamatsu, the Ultimate Pianist, and the soft-spoken Ultimate Detective Shuichi Saihara anchor the story, but the sixteen-person roster is dense with personalities that break out of their initial archetypes once the bodies start dropping. The character writing earns most of its emotional weight honestly. Voice acting in both English and Japanese lands the performances, and the soundtrack is exceptional across the board, with trial themes that sync tightly with the escalating tempo of each debate. Where V3 runs into friction is pacing in the middle chapters and a fanbase-splitting final act that commits to one of the riskiest narrative swings in modern visual novel history. Some players consider it a masterpiece of meta-commentary. Others found it infuriating. The honest answer is it is both, and whether it works for you will depend on how much you trust the game to have earned its final argument. For newcomers: the series strongly recommends playing Danganronpa 1 and 2 first, both for spoiler reasons and because the emotional payoff of V3 lands harder with that context. For returning fans, this is the most mechanically polished entry, with the most intricate trials, a story that swings bigger than anything the series attempted before, and a runtime that gives every major character room to breathe. The PC port is functional, though an unofficial community patch addresses some mouse input and sensitivity issues worth grabbing before you start. Alex, Scout Team

Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony

Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony

Sep 25, 2017Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.
GamerScout Says

Fifty hours of murder mysteries, courtroom chaos, and a cast that will make you feel terrible for liking them, V3 is the series at its sharpest, if you can stomach where it ends up.

PCXbox
Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Gold
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GamerScout Verdict

The most mechanically refined Danganronpa yet, built for players who want long trials, a strong cast, and are ready for a finale that refuses to play it safe.

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About Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony

I went in expecting Danganronpa to do what it always does: make me care about a character, then kill them in front of me. V3 does that, but it keeps raising the stakes on every axis until the whole structure starts groaning under its own weight, and somehow that is exactly the point. This is a visual novel with active trial gameplay baked in, and the split between daily school life and Class Trials is the backbone of the whole experience. Daily Life lets you explore the Ultimate Academy for Gifted Juveniles in first-person, spend free time bonding with classmates through friendship events, collect Monocoins, and buy gifts at the school store to raise bond levels and unlock trial skills. It is breezy, funny in a deeply twisted way, and the quieter moments make the violence that follows hit harder. The Class Trials are where V3 really separates itself. Each one runs three hours or more, cycling through Non-Stop Debates, Mass Panic Debates where characters talk over each other and you have to shoot down weak arguments with truth bullets earned from crime scene investigation, and a string of minigames including a substantially improved Hangman's Gambit that functions as a memory puzzle. There is also a new wrinkle this time: the ability to deliberately use Lie Bullets during debates, letting you build false arguments to manipulate the courtroom. It sounds like a gimmick but it feeds directly into V3's central theme of truth versus lies, and the writing is sharp enough to make it feel meaningful rather than cosmetic. The murder cases themselves are better constructed than in prior entries, with fewer leaps of logic requiring you to just accept what the game tells you. The cast is genuinely excellent. Protagonist Kaede Akamatsu, the Ultimate Pianist, and the soft-spoken Ultimate Detective Shuichi Saihara anchor the story, but the sixteen-person roster is dense with personalities that break out of their initial archetypes once the bodies start dropping. The character writing earns most of its emotional weight honestly. Voice acting in both English and Japanese lands the performances, and the soundtrack is exceptional across the board, with trial themes that sync tightly with the escalating tempo of each debate. Where V3 runs into friction is pacing in the middle chapters and a fanbase-splitting final act that commits to one of the riskiest narrative swings in modern visual novel history. Some players consider it a masterpiece of meta-commentary. Others found it infuriating. The honest answer is it is both, and whether it works for you will depend on how much you trust the game to have earned its final argument. For newcomers: the series strongly recommends playing Danganronpa 1 and 2 first, both for spoiler reasons and because the emotional payoff of V3 lands harder with that context. For returning fans, this is the most mechanically polished entry, with the most intricate trials, a story that swings bigger than anything the series attempted before, and a runtime that gives every major character room to breathe. The PC port is functional, though an unofficial community patch addresses some mouse input and sensitivity issues worth grabbing before you start.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaVisual NovelClass TrialMurder MysteryTruth BulletsLie MechanicNon-Stop DebateDivisive EndingStory-DrivenDark Humor

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 64-bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
26 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA@ GeForce@ GTX 460 or better
Processor
Intel Core i3-4170 @ 3.70GHz
Sound Card
DirectX compatible soundcard or onboard chipset

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 64-bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
26 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA@ GeForce@ GTX 960
Processor
Intel Core i5-4690K @3.50GHz
Sound Card
DirectX compatible soundcard or onboard chipset

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
80

Game Info

Developer
Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.
Publisher
Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.
Release Date
Sep 25, 2017

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Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony released?

Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony was released on 25 September 2017.

Who developed Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony?

Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony was developed by Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd..

Is Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony worth buying?

Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony holds a Metacritic score of 80/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.