Trails in the Sky 1st Chapter, a JRPG, just got released on Steamâand this is a big deal because this game is to PC what Final Fantasy VII was to PlayStation.
You play as Estelle Bright, a stubborn but big-hearted teen, and her adopted brother Joshua, calm and secretive, as they work as junior agents of the Bracer Guildâmercenaries who handle everything from lost pets to bandit raids.
What begins as simple small-town jobs in the idyllic kingdom of Liberl slowly peels back into a slow-burn political thriller about coups, ancient technology, and rival nations circling like sharks. The genius of Trails in the Sky is how it ties everyday people and personal stories into that larger web of conspiracies, making the upheaval feel like itâs your neighbours and your home on the line.
Some history is in order. The two most influential JRPG developers are Square Enix and Nihon Falcom. Square Enix gave us Dragon Quest and Final Fantasy. Nihon Falcom gave us Dragon Slayer and Ys. Square pushed the turn-based JRPG. Falcomâs big innovation was the action JRPG.
Dragon Slayer in particular was groundbreakingâwithout it, thereâs no Zelda, no Hydlide, no Neutopia. It was the template for action RPGs to follow, and it was so successful it spawned spin-offs. One of them was The Legend of Heroes. That series was so successful it spun off again into Trails in the Sky. And yesâTrails itself kept spinning into more games, until it became a saga of its own.
So why havenât you heard of it? Because Falcom wasnât console-first like Square. Their heyday was the PC-88 and PC-98âcomputers that never came west. When Japan switched to Windows, so did Falcom. Trails in the Sky first arrived on Windows in 2004âbut only in Japan. A PSP port followed in 2006. Still Japan only. North America finally got it in 2011⊠on PSP. By then, nobody here was playing PSP anymore.
It wasnât until 2014 that the Windows versionâbetter than the PSP oneâwas localized and released on Steam and GOG. It took more than a decade for Westerners to notice. But once they did, they realised this wasnât just another RPGâthis was a landmark.
The comparison to Final Fantasy VII is apt. Trails in the Sky is Falcomâs premiere JRPG. It cemented their reputation for long-form storytelling and kicked off a serialized epic that continues today. And if you think there are a lot of Final Fantasy games, Trails makes it look modest.
The difference is in the type impact each had. Final Fantasy VII was an atomic bomb. Trails in the Sky was a hurricaneâstarting as a whisper, then building into a storm. Westerners know the sequels like Trails of Cold Steel and Trails from Zero, but how many ever went back to the original?
Now they can. Trails in the Sky 1st Chapter is a re-imagining of that first game. And âre-imaginingâ is exactly the right word. Same story, not a simple remake.
Whatâs new? A lot. The original was purely turn-based. This version lets you switch on the fly between the classic grid system and a new real-time action mode. Combat feels fluid and layered, and Falcom themselves estimate about 80 hours to clearâdouble the originalâs runtimeâthanks to extra quests and expanded exploration.
The graphics are completely redone. The old game was 2.5D isometric spritesâthink Diablo with anime characters. The new one is full 3D, third-person, HDR-enabled, yet still faithful. Rolent, the first town, looks like you remember, just rebuilt in polygons.
Sound has levelled up. Fully animated cutscenes. Professional actors in both Japanese and English. Steam even lists French, German, and Spanish text, though only English and Japanese get full voice tracks. Most importantly, Falcomâs iconic music is intactâbecause unlike too many remakes, they didnât dare mess with perfection.
Controls are flexible. The devs push gamepads, but keyboard and mouse works beautifully. Xbox and PlayStation controllers are supported natively, and thanks to Steam Input, just about anythingâLogitech, 8BitDo, you name itâwill work.
Steam officially says Windows-only and lists Deck support as âunknown.â But previews already note it runs smooth on Deck, looks gorgeous on OLED screens, and will almost certainly get the âVerifiedâ badge. I tested it myself on Linuxâitâs flawless.
Specs are reasonable: Ryzen 5 1600, 8GB RAM, GTX 1050, and 33GB storage will net you 60fps at 1080p.
The price is steepâC$77.99. Steam also launched it with a pile of optional DLC: costumes, boosters, items. Normally Iâd balk at paying that much. But this is Trails in the Sky 1st Chapterârebuilt so a new generation can see why itâs legendary. And if thatâs still too much, the 2014 version is cheap: C$21.99 on Steam, or just C$11.00 on GOG.
Reception so far is glowing. Steam already shows a 96% positive rating across 233 reviews. Players love the balance of modern upgrades with old-school heart.
Either wayâwhether you buy todayâs re-imagining or grab the older versionâyou owe it to yourself to play Trails in the Sky. Because if you care about JRPGs, even a little, this is the one you donât skip.
https://store.steampowered.com/app/3375780/Trails_in_the_Sky_1st_Chapter/
Thanks for the great writeup! Youâve definitely piqued my interest and Iâll put it on my wish list. Pretty sure Iâve heard of it and would love to get into it blind.
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Publisher: GungHo Online Entertainment, Japan


