
Dragon Sinker
Scratch that NES-era itch with a three-party JRPG that has more job-class depth than its pixelated exterior suggests, though its story and enemy variety will test your patience before the credits roll.
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About Dragon Sinker
My first hour with Dragon Sinker felt like pulling a dusty cartridge off a shelf I forgot I owned. The 8-bit sprite work, the chiptune score, the overworld map dotted with castles and cave entrances - it lands that sensory note hard. What surprised me is how quickly the mechanical layer underneath reveals itself, because this is not simply a nostalgia prop sitting still. The core conceit is a three-party structure built around the racial alliance at the heart of the story. Prince Abram leads the human squad, while elf leader Mia and dwarf leader Bowen head their own groups. You control all three in battle, and the racial composition of each team quietly shapes your stat buffs and job experience rates - stack three humans in Abram's party, for instance, and your human job class XP ticks up faster. Job classes, of which there are over sixteen options including Warrior, Priest, Mage, Dancer, Bard, Thief, Monk, Hunter, and Baker, rank up to level 10 and permanently bequeath passive skills to party leaders when mastered. The interplay between class combos - running a Bard, Dancer, and Villager together restores HP and MP each turn - gives the build-crafting a quiet depth that takes a few hours to fully surface. Beyond that, a tombola system using Dragon Points earned from battle hands out optional party members, rare gear, and items through a lottery mechanic that, refreshingly, requires no real-money spend on the PC version. Quality-of-life touches soften what could be a grinding slog. Encounter rates are adjustable on the fly, dungeon teleport sigils sit at entrances, midpoints, and exits, and a single button press auto-heals the party using your healers' remaining MP. Those small decisions reflect a developer that understood the friction points of the genre it was homaging. The soundtrack, composed by Ryuji Sasai, leans into genuine chiptune construction rather than approximation - individual tracks carry that piercing, upbeat energy NES battle music fans will recognize, even if the limited variety means certain songs overstay their welcome by the back half. Here is where Dragon Sinker earns its honest qualifications. The main story concerning Wyrmvarg and the legendary weapons is as thin and predictable as the premise implies. Enemy designs lack the charm that made the games it references memorable - there is a noticeable absence of personality in the monster roster. The dungeon-to-town-to-dungeon loop repeats without much structural variation across a campaign that runs roughly fifteen hours for the main content, with optional content potentially extending that considerably. The PC port also inherits some mobile-origin habits: the default zoom level feels designed for a phone screen, and keyboard controls are reportedly awkward enough that the included controller support is worth using from the start. All told, Dragon Sinker sits at a specific crossroads that will either pull you in or leave you cold. If you came of age with Dragon Quest and Final Fantasy on hardware that rendered everything in chunky colored tiles, the tactile familiarity here is genuine, not cosmetic. If you need story weight or enemy variety to carry you through a fifteen-hour RPG, this one will feel thin before the ending. The job system and three-party team management are the real reasons to be here - they reward the kind of quiet tinkering that keeps a certain type of player up past midnight arranging party compositions for a boss they already beat once. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 and up
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 170 MB available space
- Graphics
- 2GB VRAM
- Processor
- Intel® Core™2 Duo
- Additional Notes
- This app features mouse, keyboard controls and partial controller support with the Xbox One controller. Touch screen is not supported.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Exe Create Inc.
- Publisher
- KEMCO
- Release Date
- Dec 19, 2017
