KINGDOM HEARTS III Re Mind + CONCERT VIDEO (DLC)
KH3's meaty story DLC plus a concert film, now on Xbox. Revisit the final clash with Xehanort through extended cutscenes, brutal boss rematches, and orchestral fanservice.
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About KINGDOM HEARTS III Re Mind + CONCERT VIDEO (DLC)
Kingdom Hearts III Re Mind is the post-game DLC that Square Enix released to answer the loudest complaint about KH3's base game: that the main cast felt sidelined during the climactic Keyblade War. Re Mind addresses that directly by replaying the endgame sequence from a different perspective, filling in cutscenes that were conspicuously absent, and then funneling you into a gauntlet of one-on-one boss rematches that are, frankly, some of the hardest fights the series has ever produced. If you bounced off the base game's Disney-world padding and wanted more Sora-versus-Organization-XIII content, this DLC is the correction. The combat in Re Mind leans hard into KH3's Keyblade transformation system and the Shotlock mechanics. The boss rematches, accessed through the Limitcut Episode, put thirteen data versions of Organization members in front of you, each with punishing move sets that demand you actually understand flowmotion, guard timing, and MP management. These are not filler fights. Data Marluxia and Data Yozora in particular will end your run repeatedly until you respect the system. The secret boss, Yozora, has become something of a community legend for difficulty and for the lore questions it raises about the series' future. There is also a brief Aqua-focused playable section that offers a taste of a different playstyle, though it is short enough to feel more like a teaser than a full feature. The included Concert Video is exactly what it sounds like: a recording of the Kingdom Hearts Orchestra World Tour performance. For series veterans who have emotional attachments to tracks like Dearly Beloved or the various world themes, it is a genuine treat. For someone who just wants more gameplay, it adds nothing mechanical. Square Enix bundles it as value-add and it does not inflate the DLC's runtime in a way that obscures the actual content, so it is easy to ignore if orchestral nostalgia is not your thing. On the narrative side, Re Mind is a mixed bag. The added cutscenes provide real emotional payoff for characters like Roxas and Kairi, and the Limitcut framing device connects meaningfully to Kingdom Hearts Dark Road and the broader Foretellers arc. But the storytelling still assumes you have done homework across a decade of spin-offs, and if you have not, moments that should land will just wash over you. The Yozora sequence in particular is rich with implication but deliberately unresolved, which is either intriguing serialized storytelling or frustrating ambiguity depending on your patience with Square Enix's long game. As someone who has tracked this series across handhelds, mobile, and two console generations, I find the dangling threads compelling. Newcomers will find them baffling. This Xbox version, released in 2024, brings the complete package to Series X and One with full controller support, adjustable difficulty, and surround sound. There are no Steam reviews available and no Metacritic score attached to this specific release at time of writing, so community consensus data is thin. What is clear is that Re Mind is the right way to close out KH3 if you finished the base game and wanted more from the endgame. It is not an entry point and it is not a substitute for the full game, but for Keyblade Warriors who still have something to prove in the data battles, it delivers exactly the punishment they asked for. Monika, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Square Enix
- Publisher
- Square Enix
- Release Date
- Jun 13, 2024