Compare Persona 5 Tactica prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by ATLUS. Published by SEGA. Released on 11/16/2023. Available on PC. Genres: RPG, Strategy.

Persona 5 Tactica takes the Phantom Thieves into a chibi tactical-RPG spin-off. Fun in short bursts, but it plays it far too safe for its own good.

Persona 5 Tactica is a tactics spin-off built around the cast of Persona 5, dropping Joker and company into a series of alternate fantasy kingdoms ruled by oppressive 'Monarchs'. The core format is a turn-based tactical RPG in the vein of Fire Emblem Engage rather than XCOM - small grid-based arenas, cover mechanics, and the signature Triple Threat system that rewards positioning three party members around an enemy to trigger an all-out attack. If you have spent any time with Persona 5 Royal's turn-press combat, the philosophy translates cleanly, even if the execution is shallower. You recruit Personas for Joker in the usual fashion, each bringing elemental skills and passive bonuses, and each party member has a small personal skill tree. It is not deep build crafting, but there is enough there to keep the first dozen hours interesting. The writing is where things get complicated. Tactica is clearly aimed at players who already love these characters rather than newcomers to the series. If you have that emotional investment, the new villain Erina's arc pays off reasonably well, and watching the Phantom Thieves operate outside their usual Tokyo context has some genuine charm. If you do not know the cast already, roughly half the dialogue will land flat because the game leans hard on established relationships rather than rebuilding them. The story moves at a decent pace early, then hits a repetitive stretch in the mid-game that really tests your patience. Each kingdom follows a near-identical structure: arrive, meet oppressed citizens, fight, boss, repeat. There are three kingdoms. You will feel all three of them. Combat itself is the strongest argument for the game. The Triple Threat mechanic is genuinely satisfying when it clicks, and the boss fights show real design imagination compared to the corridor skirmishes that fill the gaps. The challenge level on the default difficulty is gentle, which suits a comfort-food spin-off but will bore veterans looking for something to sink teeth into. Mercifully, a harder difficulty option is available. Gun-based builds and Persona stacking for Joker offer the most replay value, but most players will settle into one comfortable approach and cruise to the credits without much pressure to experiment. The character-specific Bond Skills add personality to each Phantom Thief but rarely change how you fundamentally approach a map. Presentation is a deliberate artistic choice rather than a budget limitation. The chibi art style is polarising but consistent, and the new animated cutscenes have genuine energy. The soundtrack is expectedly strong given ATLUS's track record, with battle themes that hold up across repeated encounters. Load times on PC are short and the port itself is clean, which is more than some ATLUS PC releases can claim. At roughly 30 hours for a full playthrough, Tactica does not overstay its welcome, but it does not surprise you either. For a franchise built on thematic subversion and social commentary, a spin-off this comfortable with its own formula is a minor disappointment. Bottom line: if you loved the Persona 5 cast and want a low-stakes tactical adventure with them, Tactica delivers exactly that and nothing more. If you want the narrative density and mechanical depth of the mainline games, you will be waiting for something that never quite arrives. Monika, Scout Team

Persona 5 Tactica
RPGStrategy

Persona 5 Tactica

Nov 16, 2023ATLUSSEGA
GamerScout Says

Persona 5 Tactica takes the Phantom Thieves into a chibi tactical-RPG spin-off. Fun in short bursts, but it plays it far too safe for its own good.

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 Persona 5 Tactica

Persona 5 Tactica is a tactics spin-off built around the cast of Persona 5, dropping Joker and company into a series of alternate fantasy kingdoms ruled by oppressive 'Monarchs'. The core format is a turn-based tactical RPG in the vein of Fire Emblem Engage rather than XCOM - small grid-based arenas, cover mechanics, and the signature Triple Threat system that rewards positioning three party members around an enemy to trigger an all-out attack. If you have spent any time with Persona 5 Royal's turn-press combat, the philosophy translates cleanly, even if the execution is shallower. You recruit Personas for Joker in the usual fashion, each bringing elemental skills and passive bonuses, and each party member has a small personal skill tree. It is not deep build crafting, but there is enough there to keep the first dozen hours interesting. The writing is where things get complicated. Tactica is clearly aimed at players who already love these characters rather than newcomers to the series. If you have that emotional investment, the new villain Erina's arc pays off reasonably well, and watching the Phantom Thieves operate outside their usual Tokyo context has some genuine charm. If you do not know the cast already, roughly half the dialogue will land flat because the game leans hard on established relationships rather than rebuilding them. The story moves at a decent pace early, then hits a repetitive stretch in the mid-game that really tests your patience. Each kingdom follows a near-identical structure: arrive, meet oppressed citizens, fight, boss, repeat. There are three kingdoms. You will feel all three of them. Combat itself is the strongest argument for the game. The Triple Threat mechanic is genuinely satisfying when it clicks, and the boss fights show real design imagination compared to the corridor skirmishes that fill the gaps. The challenge level on the default difficulty is gentle, which suits a comfort-food spin-off but will bore veterans looking for something to sink teeth into. Mercifully, a harder difficulty option is available. Gun-based builds and Persona stacking for Joker offer the most replay value, but most players will settle into one comfortable approach and cruise to the credits without much pressure to experiment. The character-specific Bond Skills add personality to each Phantom Thief but rarely change how you fundamentally approach a map. Presentation is a deliberate artistic choice rather than a budget limitation. The chibi art style is polarising but consistent, and the new animated cutscenes have genuine energy. The soundtrack is expectedly strong given ATLUS's track record, with battle themes that hold up across repeated encounters. Load times on PC are short and the port itself is clean, which is more than some ATLUS PC releases can claim. At roughly 30 hours for a full playthrough, Tactica does not overstay its welcome, but it does not surprise you either. For a franchise built on thematic subversion and social commentary, a spin-off this comfortable with its own formula is a minor disappointment. Bottom line: if you loved the Persona 5 cast and want a low-stakes tactical adventure with them, Tactica delivers exactly that and nothing more. If you want the narrative density and mechanical depth of the mainline games, you will be waiting for something that never quite arrives. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamChibi Art StyleTriple Threat MechanicSpin-offTactics RPGCover SystemPersona CollectingLinear StoryCouch-Friendly Difficulty

System Requirements

System requirements for Persona 5 Tactica aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
73%(2,108)

Game Info

Developer
ATLUS
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Nov 16, 2023

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from ATLUS