
The 1990s gave us some of the most celebrated Japanese RPGs of all time, and although the Lunar games are often overlooked in comparison to their contemporaries, they still encompass everything magical about that era.
The Lunar Remastered Collection is a welcome revival, then. It bundles Lunar: The Silver Star Story and Lunar 2: Eternal Blue into one convenient package, offering higher resolution visuals, some (relatively minor) quality of life improvements, and an all-new English dub.
In terms of storytelling and characterisation, both games still hold up. Granted, the overarching plotlines aren't anything special — chosen heroes, almighty dragons, a growing evil — but there's an undeniable charm to the adventures themselves.
Fully animated cutscenes — complete with that classic 90s anime style — always helped Lunar resonate on a narrative level. They remain a pleasure to behold today, but the remaster's use of AI upscaling does take the edge off once you notice it. Most players probably won't even catch on, but there are times when the AI does the typical AI thing, creating odd linework or patterns that aren't supposed to be there.

And this leads into a broader conversation about the Lunar games deserving a better return. Indeed, other aspects of this collection feel a bit half-arsed. For example, you can now double or even triple the speed of turn-based combat, which is great since the first Lunar in particular can be a slow, grindy game.
However, because combat encounters aren't random, and you can only grind for levels in set dungeons, the process of beefing up your party still feels like a chore. At this point, why not just include extras like an optional experience booster? The draw of these old titles isn't to relive their inherent tedium — it's to soak up the atmosphere of a genre's bygone era.
Given how many difficulty spikes these games have — as in, you have no real choice but to grind some levels to even stand a chance against specific bosses — it's hard not to feel as though much more could have been done to improve the overall flow.

It's a shame, because as alluded, it's Lunar's story and characters that reel you in. When you're not mindlessly battering the same monsters in the same dungeon over and over again, these are really well paced RPGs that funnel you across a fairly memorable fantasy world.
And to be honest, the battle system is pretty basic anyway. It's your standard turn-based affair that does little to excite here in 2025 — although the spritework is still immaculate. Setting up your party's formation is about as in-depth as it gets, and in both games, it's not until later on that combat demands strategic nuance beyond healing when your HP is low.
Having said all of that, there's nothing quite like the gradual satisfaction of seeing your party's stats creep higher. Maybe that's the nostalgia talking, but there's a straightforwardness to the stereotypical 90s JRPG that almost feels refreshing in this day and age.

You know what else is nostalgic? Lunar's English localisation — a script so 90s that it even manages to reference cultural events of the time. From what we can tell, the dialogue is mostly unchanged in this collection, despite the completely rerecorded voicework (which, we're happy to report, is solid throughout).
We understand why JRPG purists might have wanted a more... accurate translation for this revival, but there's no doubt that the old script helps establish a true 90s anime aesthetic. The localisation team had fun with this one, and that lighthearted, often jokey tone bleeds into Lunar's overall identity.
Conclusion
The Lunar games embody everything that's nostalgic about 90s JRPGs, from the fun characters and colourful fantasy worlds, to the glorious spritework and catchy music. That said, Lunar's underlying grind can make it difficult to stomach here in 2025 — especially when the Lunar Remastered Collection doesn't do enough to mitigate the series' most tedious aspects. It's great to experience these games again — a fully deserved revival — but it's a real shame that the collection isn't flush with more helpful features.





Comments 20
I’m so excited to replay these. For some reason I remember these games being super easy but I could be wrong so the mention of the difficulty spikes was surprising. Im totally fine with this though because I love grinding in these old school JRPGs.
Swimmin' in 7s. More than enough for me to preorder
Will be a day 1 for me.
I’m definitely getting this, just in time for my birthday next Tuesday. I think I’ll pick it up on the Switch though.
Grandia HD Collection ✅
Suikoden I & II HD Remaster ✅
Lunar Remastered Collection ✅
What will be next? I'm really hoping for a Skies of Arcadia Remaster and Breath of Fire Remastered Collection 🤞
Talking of the 90s originating, very loose translation, it's by a group called Working Designs who did quite a few similar arguably grating localisations. You can actually get fan translations for these games that are labelled as "Un-Working Designs" they're so notorious.
@Foxhound I just need these and I'm basically set on classic RPGs that are currently locked to classic hardware:
-Breath of Fire 3+4
-Xenogears
-Suikoden 3-5
-Vagrant Story
I'm shocked we got Lunar. It looked lost a lost cause for so many years due to IP rights. It's great to have two of the genres best remastered.
The price alone is a great reason to buy; the PS1 versions are $150-200 each! Japanese voices are another good reason. English dubs more often than not cause me physical pain.
Eh, I'm glad they didn't mess with the gameplay too much tbh. I just want to experience cleaned up versions of these classics in HD, not someone's half-baked attempt at 'fixing' classic game design elements.
I'm unbelievably excited to play these classics again.
Dang lower score than Suikoden
@danzoEX If the reviewer considers grinding a negative, and obviously they do, that makes sense. Suikoden's design holds up much better to modern sensibilities.
@Hylian-Likely Actually there is a site from which I ordered before. It's in Europe so check it out: https://www.shop-justforgames.eu/products/lunar-remastered-collection-playstation-4?_pos=2&_sid=d08954380&_ss=r
@Czar_Khastik Amazon is offering it in the UK too. I assume it's different in other countries.
@Foxhound I'd like DragonForce (Saturn game) personally. I randomly remembered really enjoying it back it the day, looked it up on eBay and instant regret at whatever pittance I sold it on for back then.
@glennthefrog I'm surprised Vagrant Story isn't part of the classics collection to buy for £8 as it was available on the ps store on vita if I recall. Maybe it will turn up there as Square seems to have forgotten about it.
@Balosi @glennthefrog Good stuff, I love this kind of 90s JRPGs
I am a complete sucker for anime cutscenes in games. Pretty sure this is one of the series that did that to me. Remember sitting in the food court in the 90s eating Chinese food and opening the shrink wrapper on this baby. Haven't been in a mall in decades but stuff like this brings back that nostalgia.
still can't preorder the game on the psn??
it still says "just announced"
I remember playing and finishing the first game on psone, good games. I don't remember the game being hard though, I think I play this game 😃
https://www.reddit.com/r/NSCollectors/comments/1imz9zc/there_will_be_no_physical_preorders_of_lunar/#lightbox
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