Compare Eredia: The Diary of Heroes prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Potatobrain Games. Published by Potatobrain Games. Released on 4/13/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG.

Sixty-plus hours of dark fantasy JRPG ambition from a solo developer who had no business building something this sprawling, and mostly pulled it off.

I went into Eredia: The Diary of Heroes expecting something scrappy and forgettable, the kind of RPG Maker release you clock ninety minutes of and quietly uninstall. What I found instead was a genuinely staggering act of solo-developer ambition, rough edges and all, that kept pulling me back across what turned out to be a sixty-plus hour run through a war-torn continent I actually grew to care about. The world is called Arlis, and you arrive in it as Kenrad Krauser, a chaotic-neutral hunter whose alignment in life is roughly "get paid, get famous, get the girl." He is not a hero in any traditional sense, and the game does not pretend otherwise. A hidden karma system silently judges every decision you make, from how you complete contracts to what you loot off the bodies of the recently deceased. That moral weight accumulates quietly and you feel it. The main quest is genuinely convoluted, a plot that spirals from regional bandit disputes into demigods, eldritch abominations, and warring empires, and the story does not always hold itself together. But the world surrounding it is alive in ways that are rare for any budget tier. NPCs have ambitions, grievances, and arcs of their own. Side contracts span stealth missions, murder investigations, exorcisms, and puzzles, over a hundred of them in total, each with its own flavour. The dynamic calendar system means festivals and tournaments appear on specific dates, and missing one feels genuinely consequential. The CTB battle system layers traits, combo chains, and finisher mechanics onto a familiar turn-based skeleton. In practice, combat lands somewhere between comfortable and shallow. Random encounter rates are aggressively high, and once you work out that status ailments cut through even boss encounters without resistance, much of the tactical tension dissolves. Veteran JRPG players will find the rhythm quickly; those hoping for something closer to a Kiseki-style depth of mechanics will find the systems a little underdressed. Guilds are the exception worth highlighting. Joining up to four of them across the continent, each with its own promotion system and perks, adds a genuine sense of faction identity that most games of this scale simply skip. Built in RPG Maker MV, Eredia leans heavily on shared asset libraries for its visuals and its music. Knowing that context, it is hard not to feel a little wistful about what a purpose-built soundtrack might have done for this world. What is here works, location themes matched appropriately to each setting, and the audio selection draws from composers like Kevin MacLeod and Makai Symphony to respectable effect. The pixel presentation is functional, occasionally charming, never remarkable. What carries the experience is craft in a different register: the writing, which swings between genuinely funny and surprisingly affecting, and the sheer density of content crammed into a project this small. Eredia: The Diary of Heroes is not a polished gem. It is the kind of game that a certain kind of player finds and cannot stop thinking about, and that most others will bounce off within two hours. If you have affection for the JRPG format, patience for a slow and tangled early narrative, and any nostalgia for the creative energy of the RPG Maker scene, this is absolutely the underdog worth your time. Just go in knowing what it is: one developer with an enormous idea and the determination to see it through, imperfections included. Kai, Scout Team

Eredia: The Diary of Heroes
AdventureCasualIndieRPG

Eredia: The Diary of Heroes

Apr 13, 2018Potatobrain Games
GamerScout Says

Sixty-plus hours of dark fantasy JRPG ambition from a solo developer who had no business building something this sprawling, and mostly pulled it off.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

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.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Eredia: The Diary of Heroes

I went into Eredia: The Diary of Heroes expecting something scrappy and forgettable, the kind of RPG Maker release you clock ninety minutes of and quietly uninstall. What I found instead was a genuinely staggering act of solo-developer ambition, rough edges and all, that kept pulling me back across what turned out to be a sixty-plus hour run through a war-torn continent I actually grew to care about. The world is called Arlis, and you arrive in it as Kenrad Krauser, a chaotic-neutral hunter whose alignment in life is roughly "get paid, get famous, get the girl." He is not a hero in any traditional sense, and the game does not pretend otherwise. A hidden karma system silently judges every decision you make, from how you complete contracts to what you loot off the bodies of the recently deceased. That moral weight accumulates quietly and you feel it. The main quest is genuinely convoluted, a plot that spirals from regional bandit disputes into demigods, eldritch abominations, and warring empires, and the story does not always hold itself together. But the world surrounding it is alive in ways that are rare for any budget tier. NPCs have ambitions, grievances, and arcs of their own. Side contracts span stealth missions, murder investigations, exorcisms, and puzzles, over a hundred of them in total, each with its own flavour. The dynamic calendar system means festivals and tournaments appear on specific dates, and missing one feels genuinely consequential. The CTB battle system layers traits, combo chains, and finisher mechanics onto a familiar turn-based skeleton. In practice, combat lands somewhere between comfortable and shallow. Random encounter rates are aggressively high, and once you work out that status ailments cut through even boss encounters without resistance, much of the tactical tension dissolves. Veteran JRPG players will find the rhythm quickly; those hoping for something closer to a Kiseki-style depth of mechanics will find the systems a little underdressed. Guilds are the exception worth highlighting. Joining up to four of them across the continent, each with its own promotion system and perks, adds a genuine sense of faction identity that most games of this scale simply skip. Built in RPG Maker MV, Eredia leans heavily on shared asset libraries for its visuals and its music. Knowing that context, it is hard not to feel a little wistful about what a purpose-built soundtrack might have done for this world. What is here works, location themes matched appropriately to each setting, and the audio selection draws from composers like Kevin MacLeod and Makai Symphony to respectable effect. The pixel presentation is functional, occasionally charming, never remarkable. What carries the experience is craft in a different register: the writing, which swings between genuinely funny and surprisingly affecting, and the sheer density of content crammed into a project this small. Eredia: The Diary of Heroes is not a polished gem. It is the kind of game that a certain kind of player finds and cannot stop thinking about, and that most others will bounce off within two hours. If you have affection for the JRPG format, patience for a slow and tangled early narrative, and any nostalgia for the creative energy of the RPG Maker scene, this is absolutely the underdog worth your time. Just go in knowing what it is: one developer with an enormous idea and the determination to see it through, imperfections included. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Dark FantasyAntihero ProtagonistContract SystemGuild ProgressionKarma SystemCTB CombatHigh Encounter RateOpen World JRPGSolo Developer

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
WIN7 SP1/WIN8/WIN10/XP
Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
800 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9 Compatible Graphics Card with 1280x720 Resolution Support
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo

Recommended

OS
WIN7 SP1/WIN8/WIN10/XP
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9 Compatible Graphics Card with 1280x720 Resolution Support
Processor
Intel Core i3 and Above

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Eredia: The Diary of Heroes.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Potatobrain Games
Publisher
Potatobrain Games
Release Date
Apr 13, 2018

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Frequently asked questions about Eredia: The Diary of Heroes

Where can I buy Eredia: The Diary of Heroes cheapest?

Compare Eredia: The Diary of Heroes prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Eredia: The Diary of Heroes available on?

Eredia: The Diary of Heroes is available on PC.

When was Eredia: The Diary of Heroes released?

Eredia: The Diary of Heroes was released on 13 April 2018.

Who developed Eredia: The Diary of Heroes?

Eredia: The Diary of Heroes was developed by Potatobrain Games.