Although Shin Megami Tensei is technically the flagship RPG franchise over at Atlus, its spin-off Persona series has made huge strides in finding mainstream appeal in recent years. While Persona 5 may have done most of the heavy lifting, Persona 4 Golden (P4G)—the enhanced re-release of the PS2 classic—was also an instrumental part in getting the series on the map. Part of the benefit of being released on the tragically doomed PS Vita meant that it was that much easier to stand out from the slim crowd of games on the platform, and P4G was quickly lauded as one of the few must-have buys for the platform. After stronger-than-expected sales from its surprise Steam release in 2020, P4G has now found its way to the Switch and we’re pleased to report that it is still a thoroughly delightful RPG.
P4G places you in the role of a city-dwelling silent protagonist who moves to the rural town of Inaba to live with his uncle and cousin for a year while his parents work abroad. While your character seems to adjust well to his new life, things are tense around town as there’s a serial killer on the loose who’s consistently evading the police. Your character and his newfound friends then quickly get wrapped up in the mystery when they discover the Midnight Channel, a mysterious 'other world' that can be accessed by crawling through a TV screen. The killer is using the Midnight Channel and its abundant population of Shadows to murder his victims, but you soon realize that you can battle Shadows using your Personas and free the victims before it's too late. You and your friends thus set out to save the killer’s victims while also stringing together clues to try and deduce who the killer is.
Despite the rather intense premise, P4G's narrative feels notably lighthearted, which makes its darker moments all the more of a gut punch. There are some very real, emotional events to be experienced in this story, and much of their weight is due to the increased focus on character development. Though previous Persona games certainly featured strong characters, it feels like P4G places much more importance on fleshing out each member of the 'Investigation Team' with individual arcs while also taking the time to highlight more small, mundane moments between them. These little moments add up and elevate the cast from feeling like ‘party members’ and more like friends and people with real depth to them. This greater focus on relationships and character development makes the plot that much more gripping.
Gameplay follows the standard Persona formula of mixing together social sim elements with traditional JRPG gameplay, and it’s executed here brilliantly. Though your character may be a badass supernatural warrior, they’re also a high school student first. The demands of studying and socialising don't go away just because the killer kidnaps another victim. Thus, you spend most of your weeks attending school, participating in clubs, hanging out with friends, and working part-time jobs. Often, these activities will boost various social stats in traits like intelligence or diligence, allowing you to better relate to the various people in your character’s life.
This is especially important given that many characters feature Social Links that greatly enhance both the story and gameplay. Each character’s Social Link will progress an optional sub-narrative centered around them, and progressing to each new step in their story will grant you benefits in finding and fusing Personas that you use for dungeon exploration. Plus, progressing Social Links for party members will cause them to become more effective in battle with things like extra attacks or more powerful versions of their Personas. It’s not possible to max out every character’s Social Link in one playthrough without sticking to a ruthlessly strict schedule, so you have to ultimately pick and choose which characters you want to get closest to.
This is a larger mechanic of managing the life sim side of the game, as your character has a limited amount of time to spend on any given activity each day. Most days you’re stuck in school till the afternoon, so you only have time for one activity before night comes. It’s up to you whether you spend your time exploring the latest dungeon, hanging out with a friend, or studying for the upcoming exams, but your actions will always have consequences further down the line. Neglect furthering some Social Links, and you’ll have a tougher time shoring up a sharp team of Personas to fight with. Skip out on studying and you might not be able to form a particular Social Link until you’ve hit the books enough. Ignore exploring the dungeon too long, and you might run out of time before the next victim dies. There are usually no wrong answers about what you should do next, but there’s always a give-and-take to whatever you choose to do.
Luckily, there is an online option that can help give you some guidance on what might be the best option. When your character gets some free time, you can connect to the Vox Populi online feature to get tips on what other players chose to do with that day in their playthrough or what Personas they chose to fuse. You’re usually given a handful of answers here, but this at least pushes you in the right direction without holding your hand; it’s like giving you the benefits of a written or video internet guide without taking away the autonomy and magic of experiencing the game yourself.
When you choose to go into the next dungeon, things unfold as you’d expect from a turn-based RPG. You explore labyrinthine environments laden with enemies to fight and treasures to seek, culminating in a tough boss fight at the end to cap things off. Though dungeons are still procedurally generated like in P3P, their implementation here feels much more pleasant thanks to the heightened focus on tailoring each one to the story. Every dungeon is thematically linked to the victim contained within, which gives each one its own identity, and they never overstay their welcome. Dungeons are only about a dozen floors or less here, which means that they end almost exactly as you start feeling like the floors are blending together.
Combat follows the same One More turn-based system that Persona fans have come to love, which pushes players to be strategic in how they dismantle enemy teams. The goal of most encounters is to identify enemy elemental weaknesses and use the correct attacks to exploit them, but there’s an additional layer to be considered with resource management. There are very few ways to replenish SP, which is what you use for most special attacks so you have to consider how a cast will affect not just your current battle, but also your general run on the dungeon for that day. You can’t reasonably explore higher floors if a couple of your characters’ SP reserves are tapped out, so making sure that you reasonably pace yourself is important to ensure you reach the boss quickly enough and with characters who are well-equipped to handle the fight.
Between dungeon runs or when you’re out and about after school, you’ll often visit the Velvet Room to forge a better team of Personas for yourself. While all your party members in combat only have access to one Persona, your character is a ‘Wild Card’ who can host multiple Personas at once. Each Persona comes with its own unique mixture of stats, elemental affinities, and skills, and the best way to get the most powerful ones comes from fusing them in the Velvet Room. Doing so will cause you to lose the Personas you used as fodder, but this is often a fair trade given that you’re usually trading up for something better. This is especially true if you’ve been mindful about keeping up your Social Links, as these will grant big experience and stat boosts to many new Personas that make them even more powerful right out of the gate.
Luckily, one improvement made for the ‘Golden’ release of Persona 4 was the ability to manually choose which skills the new Persona would inherit from those being fused. There are some restrictions in place, but this allows you much greater control over shaping your team and greatly reduces the headache of leaving this critical aspect of team building to chance. Manual skill inheritance isn’t the only improvement being brought to P4G either, there are all sorts of new tweaks to this version both big and small. Changes like being able to do more activities at night help to open up more options for managing your time effectively, while new Social Links, Personas, and an extra late-game dungeon, add lots more to do and see compared to the original PS2 release. Unlike its predecessor’s ‘final’ versions which were each incomplete in their own ways, P4G is easily the definitive way to experience Persona 4.
Visually, P4G shows its age a bit due to the simplistic models utilized for most characters and enemies, but there’s still plenty to love about the offbeat and occasionally bizarre art design of many enemies. On the other hand, the character portraits in dialogue look incredibly clean and bright in contrast to the somewhat muted 3D visuals. And while Persona 5 is easily the most stylish entry in the series, P4G still manages to show some characteristic flair with over-the-top attack animations and smooth menu transitions. P4G may not be exactly a looker by today’s standards, but it's perfectly acceptable for a quick and dirty port of a Vita game. Plus, it all runs without any noticeable frame rate hitches or resolution drops.
To match the general tone, the soundtrack features a potent mixture of pop and rock tracks that help to set the bouncy atmosphere and keep things light. Though there are some tracks that get a little irritating from sheer repetition—seventy or so hours is a long time to sit with some music—the sheer catchiness is hard to resist.
Conclusion
Over ten years later, Persona 4 Golden remains a thoroughly enjoyable and engrossing RPG that, for the most part, has stood the test of time. Although its visuals might be a bit dated, the gameplay and story presented here do more than enough to justify the purchase, while all the tweaks and additions that came with this ‘Golden’ edition round out most of the rougher edges from the initial PS2 release. If you're looking to give the Persona series a shot, Persona 5 Royal is a good place to start, but P4G is an excellent entry in the series and one that we would recommend you pick up when you can.
Comments 64
Ou et la physical???
Visuals being dated is such a bizarre complaint given that it’s a game that people have been wanting ported for genuinely years. Were they supposed to fully remake the game with better graphics? If that was the case then there would have been a 0% chance that it came to the Switch.
Release the physical version you cowards !
Wait... the same person that "Reviewed" 4 Golden is the same one that "reviewed" 3 Portable at the same time?
Yeah... you didn't finish the game... No wonder these reviews don't make any sense.
10/10 for me.
One of the best games ever made and a must play for JRPG fans.
Also I disagree with the music complaint, it's one of the best soundtracks out there and will be stuck in your head for years.
This is one of the best RPGs ever. Played the heck out of it on my Vita. It's a great ride all the way through, story, gameplay, and especially the soundtrack.
Persona 3, 4 and also Fire Emblem in the same month. Looks like this will be a stron year for the Nintendo Switch.
Reading the Persona guide posted earlier this month, it seemed as a Persona newbie, 4 & 5 would be the ones I would enjoy the most. Seeing that 5 is in the backlog already, should probably pick up 4 and play that first!
THE PORT IS GOOD THANK THE LORD
P4 Golden has slowly crept up to becoming one of my most anticipated releases of this year and to see it make the transition to Switch as near flawlessly as 5 Royal makes me ecstatic. Can't wait to grab this once I'm through my current backlog!
I'll probably play it one day but I just played Persona 5 Royal for the first time when it released on Switch and after how long that was I don't think I'm going to be ready for another game in the series for quite some time.
I really enjoyed what I played of this on Vita years ago. If they do a physical release I’ll probably pick it up, otherwise will skip. Still need to find time to start P5
> Visuals look dated
It's a port of old game. Like, what did you expect? What a weird con.
> Some music can get repetitive
Well. That's just ridiculous.
Held off on starting P5R so I could play this again first. Playing P4G for the first time was one of the best experiences I had with the Vita.
What is the performance like on the Switch? Res/FPS?
UPDATE: GameXplain vid did say it runs 60fps.
It's fine. Huge improvement over P3, although after having played P5 twice, the terrible dungeons and unengaging monster collection mechanics in this one are difficult to go back to these days.
The music is absolutely outstanding. Persona even have their own concerts that sell out due to how incredible the music is. Bizarre opinion. I know you said "some" music, but...nevermind.
Happy to add these to my switch library.
visuals look dated? lmao! for starters pretty much all visuals on switch look dated or worse than what you can get elsewhere. this isnt a proper remake, right? I mean when ocarina of time was released for the 3ds - and despite having improved visuals over the n64 version, the visuals looked dated af, lol.
@Fizza There are some moments where the game lets itself down and slides into as some would call it "utter cringe" and the dungeons are basic but it is overall a very good game and I hope you enjoy it.
I think people often place too much emphasis on the pros/cons section, to be honest. Maybe because it’s the only part of the review they actually bother reading.
The way people react makes it seem like some sort of ‘moral judgement’ of the game — a ‘do better next time’ checklist for the developers — rather than just a handy summary of things that potential purchasers should be aware of.
Maybe you enjoyed Persona 5 and were thinking about picking up the preceding title, knowing nothing about it other than the fact that 4 comes before 5. The pros and cons section tells you that you’ll probably enjoy the game, but also cautions you not to expect the same level of graphical flair on display in the sequel. This is perfectly fair, and genuinely useful information.
At the very least, the game was awarded a 9/10, so the reviewer clearly didn’t hold the graphics against it too much.
Why are PushSquare reviews of these remasters praising the games to death, yet the NintendoLife one is complaining about presentation and graphics? Did you guys switch up reviews or something? lol
Held off getting it on PC and I’m buying this as a birthday present. The anime proved that the characters are its biggest strength and I can’t wait to get stuck in.
Were there a physical release, I would’ve bought it by now! As it is, well, let’s just say I can wait a very long time for a steep discount on the eShop.
What's about dual audio support, though?
Sorry Yukiko, it's going to be Risette this time around.
I may still start on 3, because over on Pure Xbox they seemed to like it a little more than NL.
Getting 4, though. No question there.
Seen on reddit that Vox Populi feature requires a NSO subscription.
@Rika_Yoshitake Those reviews really made you so angry that you felt the need to comment the exact same thing on both reviews?
hoping one day 3 and 4 get a physical release..
@TeaCatherine I know it sounds weird but I honestly don't mind cringe in games like these since it sounds like it'd be the fun, memorable kind of cringe rather than the painful kind that's seen in a lot of 'meta' games, you know? Could be entirely off-base with that kind of assessment but hey you never know XD
Getting this day 1 on Switch. It’s an actual definitive edition of P4.
Skipping P3P because Atlus didn’t bother to make an actual definitive edition for P3 that took the best of P3 FES and P3P.
@Rika_Yoshitake They actually make perfect sense if you actually utilize critical thinking and realize both of these games are ports from years ago that reviewer likely already played and these Switch ports are not anything different besides very minimal QoL additions. You don’t need 100+ hour palythroughs to get this information.
@Arawn93 There's a rumor going around that Atlus is working on a proper remake of P3, though I don't know how true it is. I thought it was pretty weird that they chose P3P instead of FES for the modern remaster; aside from manual party control and the female route, that game doesn't have much going for it compared to FES.
@SwitchVogel yeah hopefully that is the case. I’ll buy that P3 game if I’m playing P3 again.
As long as these two are not physical, they will forever be a no but for me… just like Portal 1/2
@Fizza I'm just saying there's one scene in particular that I'm surprised is not more controversial that just gets my goat up.
If this were a full priced £50 release I could see the “dated visuals” complaint being valid; I’d want a proper remaster at that price but this is £18…seems more than fair for a no frills port of an older game, especially one that’s so revered and one with so much content
Was the first Persona I played; took a punt on something different and have loved 5 equally. Serious question: would 3 be worth my time? I've read the review and am still unsure!
Easily the best JRPG I've played, without counting Persona 5 which I have not finished yet.
Picked this up a few years back on ps vita having never played any of the series and absolutely loved it would recommend it to anyone even if RPGs aren’t your thing
@johnedwin I hope so too, preferably as a bundle and not separate. So weird that they had one for 5R on day one and not these.
@Lukeim64 If you've already played 4 and 5, I think 3 would be worth it, but play the FES version if you can. P3P is good but not great, and it lacks a lot of content that was in FES.
@SwitchVogel ok thanks! ✊
And my hot take with this is: the original version of P4 was better, and the additions here were mixed at best, trashy at worst.
But I still think the game is well worth the price of admission and worth playing if you've never had the chance.
just learned P3P + P4G do run at 60fps on Switch that is a win
I know quite a few people who absolutely love this game, so I'm excited to check it out after I play Persona 5.
@Ralizah I did play P4G on my Steam Deck and PC a while ago (Vita one I played twice when that was still a exclusive)
It is still enjoyable though even after playing P5 and P5R just before that, but I agree that P4G felt “more enjoyable” before playing P5 and P5R, the changes in the latter 2 just make sense, and sometimes you miss that in P4G.
Story in P4G is still fun though, while the one in P5 and P5R is more “mature” I never found the one of P4G worse because of it.
As for P3, I tortured myself years ago with the FES one, and I truly hate the FES it’s last dungeon THE MOST.
So playing P3P will at least solve that issue for me, but I don’t fully remember what I found of that game anymore, I only played it once when FES came out.
@rawzeku yeah this feels like they needed some cons.
If anything both cons in this review are subjective, the real con could be the dungeons for example, I could agree on that.
At least both run at 60fps from what I heard.
@GrailUK only on Vita (not counting P4 on PS2)
@Browny how so?
Yes going to be getting this game again for the 3rd time. 4th if a physical release exist.
It's still a 10/10 game for me, and I prefer it to P5 (although P5 is still really good). Oddly though, I still prefer the vanilla version on PS2, as I really liked Chie and Teddy's original voice actors. Still, I'll probably pick this up if it goes physical at some point. I could totally see a P3/P4 double pack being released someday.
My favourite game ever
@Zverik Anything online requires NSO even if it's a stupid as a leaderboard. Only full f2p games get to escape that disgusting service.
What a week, between this one and FE Engaged!
This will come home, for sure it will. And after this, if I like it, I'll get Persona 5.
@nessisonett The current visuals are timeless, love them. A new remake would be possible on Switch if they use the P5R engine though.
To those who've played both P4 and P5, are there any gameplay features that the former had but the latter didn't get? I've only played P3P before and I'm aiming to add P5G to my Switch collection, but I'm a bit hesitant as I'm unsure if I'll be missing out on something by skipping P4. Will appreciate some feedback on the matter.
I'm sorry for being the broken record here, but I am not touching either of these unless they get a physical release. I already own them both on Vita and P5R was a Switch day-one steelbook buy from me. They could literally put a $20 switch tax and sell them both together physically for $60 and I'd rather buy that than $20 for each. I just don't see a reason to double dip for digital copies with nothing to add, rather for collectors and future preservation purposes.
Some music can get repetitive? The reviewer clearly didn't like True Story (Heeeello)
You know how you said the music can get repetitive and that's annoying? Music with lyrics in my games feels like the songs are physically stacking up in my head until it's about to pop. So, any chance there's a separate audio slider for the music?
@Arawn93 ...actually???
second best title in the series after P5R
waiting for a physical or a large drop in price if digital, not paying this amount of money for an old porting
The Persona series walked so that Tokyo Mirage Sessions could run.
@Rika_Yoshitake I follow Nintendo Life since its beginning (where two different sites merged), but the content it is at the lowest quality ever.
And it is usual for them to "review" a game without finishing it.
@Rika_Yoshitake Wait the same person that commented on the P3P review copy/pasted the same comment on the P4G review? Wow. No wonder this commenter looks so foolish.
@AshFoxX I am with you that they should release these physically, but given how direct these ports are across all platforms I don’t think they’re really for people who own them already and more for those who never played them and never had the means, not so much for double dippers
Ah brilliant. Thought it would be great and the Switch is the perfect console for it. Insta-buy.
Cheers for the review
Tap here to load 64 comments
Leave A Comment
Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...