Compare Isekai Rondo prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Exe Create Inc.. Published by KEMCO. Released on 9/14/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, RPG, Simulation, Strategy.

If you have a soft spot for retro JRPGs and isekai anime tropes, this one delivers a surprisingly self-aware passive-skill system and a story that pokes fun at Japanese overwork culture. Just do not come expecting the difficulty to put up a fight.

I went in expecting exactly what KEMCO delivers every month or so: retro pixel art, a straightforward turn-based battle loop, and maybe fifteen hours before the credits roll. What I did not expect was a passive-progression system interesting enough to keep a spreadsheet open in a second window. The protagonist Shaw starts as a literal Unemployed class, grinds his way into a Sage role, and from that point the game's entire mechanical identity shifts into unlocking and optimising passives tied to specific behaviours in combat. Use a fire spell enough times and your fire affinity climbs. Keep a plant-spirit alive through a full battle and the party earns a permanent buff. One passive, called Accident Insurance, lets you rewind to before a game-over choice if Shaw has it equipped. That is a genuinely clever piece of design that fits the isekai fiction thematically and saves tedious reloads in practice. The party is small but each member has a distinct mechanical identity. Drowt plays like a conventional fighter-type. Viola handles spirit summons, which function as a secondary resource you position tactically during turns. Then there is Famin, who can eat items directly from inventory to generate stat effects mid-battle. Community consensus, and my own experience, is that Famin breaks the economy wide open once you figure out what she can swallow. The elemental weakness triangle of Fire, Water, and Wood, with a Void catchall, keeps individual encounters from being completely brainless on paper. In practice, the difficulty ceiling is low even at the Very Hard setting. The passive system snowballs quickly enough that you will out-level the curve well before the midpoint, and the Magistone shop, while technically currency-grinds-only on the PC version, hands out gear that jumps you several power bands if you use it early. For people who play these games for mechanical depth alone, that ease is a real problem. I ran the final third of the main path on auto-battle at triple speed without turning it off. But here is the argument for buying anyway: the story is the actual point. The game opens with a pointed critique of exploitative Japanese salaryman culture, and it stays aware of its own isekai genre conventions throughout. It subverts a few tropes rather than just recycling them, the NPC dialogue updates as the world map changes, and the cast carries enough personality that the writing stays readable across the full fifteen to twenty hour main route. A completionist run stretches to around twenty-five hours with the post-game arena stages, optional dungeon, and the full passive-unlock checklist. Presentation is pixel art in the GBA-to-SNES register, closer on the character sprite side to something like Chrono Trigger in resolution terms, with battle animations that land noticeably better than several comparable KEMCO releases. The PC version is a direct port of the mobile original, and the interface shows it. Button sizing is occasionally awkward with a mouse, and a drawer-based hotkey system for field movement accessories is genuinely annoying when navigating floors with alternating tile hazards. Controller input smooths most of that out. There is no mod support, no difficulty overhaul community to speak of, and no content updates of note since launch. What you see at the store page is what the game is. For the target audience, that is probably fine: this is a self-contained forty-eight-hour artefact, not a service. Diego, Scout Team

Isekai Rondo
AdventureRPGSimulationStrategy

Isekai Rondo

Sep 14, 2023Exe Create Inc.KEMCO
GamerScout Says

If you have a soft spot for retro JRPGs and isekai anime tropes, this one delivers a surprisingly self-aware passive-skill system and a story that pokes fun at Japanese overwork culture. Just do not come expecting the difficulty to put up a fight.

PC
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Historical low: $9.06

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About Isekai Rondo

I went in expecting exactly what KEMCO delivers every month or so: retro pixel art, a straightforward turn-based battle loop, and maybe fifteen hours before the credits roll. What I did not expect was a passive-progression system interesting enough to keep a spreadsheet open in a second window. The protagonist Shaw starts as a literal Unemployed class, grinds his way into a Sage role, and from that point the game's entire mechanical identity shifts into unlocking and optimising passives tied to specific behaviours in combat. Use a fire spell enough times and your fire affinity climbs. Keep a plant-spirit alive through a full battle and the party earns a permanent buff. One passive, called Accident Insurance, lets you rewind to before a game-over choice if Shaw has it equipped. That is a genuinely clever piece of design that fits the isekai fiction thematically and saves tedious reloads in practice. The party is small but each member has a distinct mechanical identity. Drowt plays like a conventional fighter-type. Viola handles spirit summons, which function as a secondary resource you position tactically during turns. Then there is Famin, who can eat items directly from inventory to generate stat effects mid-battle. Community consensus, and my own experience, is that Famin breaks the economy wide open once you figure out what she can swallow. The elemental weakness triangle of Fire, Water, and Wood, with a Void catchall, keeps individual encounters from being completely brainless on paper. In practice, the difficulty ceiling is low even at the Very Hard setting. The passive system snowballs quickly enough that you will out-level the curve well before the midpoint, and the Magistone shop, while technically currency-grinds-only on the PC version, hands out gear that jumps you several power bands if you use it early. For people who play these games for mechanical depth alone, that ease is a real problem. I ran the final third of the main path on auto-battle at triple speed without turning it off. But here is the argument for buying anyway: the story is the actual point. The game opens with a pointed critique of exploitative Japanese salaryman culture, and it stays aware of its own isekai genre conventions throughout. It subverts a few tropes rather than just recycling them, the NPC dialogue updates as the world map changes, and the cast carries enough personality that the writing stays readable across the full fifteen to twenty hour main route. A completionist run stretches to around twenty-five hours with the post-game arena stages, optional dungeon, and the full passive-unlock checklist. Presentation is pixel art in the GBA-to-SNES register, closer on the character sprite side to something like Chrono Trigger in resolution terms, with battle animations that land noticeably better than several comparable KEMCO releases. The PC version is a direct port of the mobile original, and the interface shows it. Button sizing is occasionally awkward with a mouse, and a drawer-based hotkey system for field movement accessories is genuinely annoying when navigating floors with alternating tile hazards. Controller input smooths most of that out. There is no mod support, no difficulty overhaul community to speak of, and no content updates of note since launch. What you see at the store page is what the game is. For the target audience, that is probably fine: this is a self-contained forty-eight-hour artefact, not a service. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:indiePassive Skill ProgressionIsekai NarrativeJRPG Auto-BattlePost-Game ArenaElemental Weakness SystemParty-Based Turn-BasedChiptune SoundtrackMobile Port

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Verified

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System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 and up
Memory
8 MB RAM
Storage
1.4 GB available space
Graphics
4GB VRAM
Processor
Intel® Core™ i5
Additional Notes
This app features keyboard controls and partial controller support with the Xbox controller. Mouse/touch screen are not supported.

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Game Info

Developer
Exe Create Inc.
Publisher
KEMCO
Release Date
Sep 14, 2023

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2026-06-109.06(lowest)

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Isekai Rondo is available on PC.

When was Isekai Rondo released?

Isekai Rondo was released on 14 September 2023.

Who developed Isekai Rondo?

Isekai Rondo was developed by Exe Create Inc. and published by KEMCO.