Much like the excellent fourth and fifth entries in the core series, Persona 3 Portable sees you balance the travails of day to day life as an adolescent high-schooler with a twilight supernatural world where kids with burgeoning psychic powers enter randomly generated dungeons – in this case a huge, sprawling tower known as Tartarus – to battle a horrific menagerie of creepy monsters known as Shadows. The story remains the same, but this new twist gives seasoned fans a new way to play, and gives the whole package extra replay value. The time-honoured storyline of a transfer student turning up in a new town stays the same – but the gameplay experience is markedly different depending on your chosen gender, with a completely new set of social links and potential relationships to be explored, most obviously the ability to enjoy romantic dalliances from a female perspective. On the plus side, Persona 3 Portable allows you to choose either a male or female protagonist. But Persona 3 Portable is a remastered version of the portable release – which is fine for Switch gamers, and still a very, very good game – but may leave some feeling a bit short changed for reasons I will explain as we go. The blinding original for PlayStation 2 had an improved FES version, the game was then slimmed down and squished onto the underrated PSP console with intuitive handheld alterations. There have been multiple versions of Persona 3 over the years.
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