Shin Megami Tensei: Persona Updated Impressions

We get an updated look at the persona-summoning game that started it all.

In the past 12 years, the Persona spin-off series has garnered a rabid fan following. But for new fans who want to start from the beginning, it's not easy to get a hold of the original game. Atlus is once again relocalizing Persona for North American audiences, but this time, it will be on the PlayStation Portable with new additions and slight gameplay changes. At this year's Electronic Entertainment Expo, we were only able to play through a brief battle sequence, but an Atlus rep came by our office recently to walk us through the intro and go over some of the familiar battle mechanics.

Flash Player 9 is required to watch this video.

Check out the new animated cutscene!

For those who discovered the niche series with Persona 3 and 4, one important thing to note is that the original Persona is more of a traditional role-playing game than an RPG/social simulator. The original set the tone of the series with its dark and eerie storyline, as well as the introduction of personae: spirits that can be summoned by a character to aid in battle. Persona's story begins with a group of high school students who--through some bizarre circumstances--get knocked unconscious by a mysterious force and wake up with the ability to summon their own personae. You play as one of the young students (whom you will get to name) who wakes up in the school's infirmary with a newfound power. One of your first thoughts is to see your friend Maki, a frail, bedridden girl who has spent much of her life in the hospital. Things start to get a little strange here because the hospital is suddenly invaded by demons and the sterile hallways turn into a maze where random battles await.

Persona feels like an old-school RPG, especially when you're navigating in a first-person view down the long, empty corridors, but the rest of the game is in the third-person view. A helpful minimap is displayed in the bottom corner to help track your progress through the area while fighting one random battle after another. The frequency of battles and difficulty will be the same as in the Japanese version of the game. The reasoning behind this has to do with the fact that Atlus wanted to keep the difficulty at the same level as the original. Fights are turn-based, but if you're grinding or uninterested in paying much attention, you can have the AI take over or set your own criteria, letting the battle unfold automatically and quickly. During these auto-fights, animations are skipped so battles will go by extremely fast. This is a nice feature if you don't want to micromanage every encounter and make it less tedious for those who don't like grinding.

You don't always have to fight when you come across demons though. To recruit personae to fight on your side, you can contact a demon during a fight and pick from a list of verbs to change its mood. The demon's traits, as well as mood level, are displayed onscreen so you can decide whether you want to sing to it or bully it into joining your team by raising its eagerness level. If you can raise the demon's eagerness, it will leave you its tarot card and the battle ends. By making it happy, the demon may leave behind helpful items so it's always in your best interest to encourage it to be happy or eager. We're not even sure we want to know what happens when a demon becomes angry or scared. Sometimes you'll have to give up your own items or health to seal the deal, but recruiting new personae is important for potential persona fusion.

Animated cutscenes, as well as voice acting, have been added to this version to help bring the bizarre story and its inhabitants to life. The dialogue has been relocalized by the current Atlus team, and the game is now in widescreen with higher resolution art. Other changes include a new over-world map and a new interface that will display more helpful information. The circle button can be used to run, and the start button will skip summoning and speed up battle animations. Fans will notice that Persona's soundtrack has also received a makeover. The music has been entirely redone by Shoji Meguro, so it's going to have that Japanese pop vibe, which is similar to the recent Persona games. Atlus also announced that the original Japanese soundtrack will be bundled with the game when it ships. One last addition--which will only be noticeable to those who were familiar with the Japanese version, as well as the original North American version--is that the snow queen quest has been re-added.

Our time with SMT: Persona was brief, but we were happy with what we saw and hope to get more hands-on time in the following weeks. It's great that Atlus is bringing these older games to the handheld so that a new generation of Persona fans can play them for the first time. Look for Shin Megami Tensei: Persona when it is released September 22.

82 Comments

  • indigodeville

    Posted Sep 9, 2009 9:45 pm PT

    Hmm... Never played any Persona Series before. This might a good start for me.

  • DragonicB

    Posted Aug 24, 2009 11:03 pm PT

    Looks great . . . Even though I am not into the negotiation part x]

  • Psiconault

    Posted Aug 14, 2009 9:31 pm PT

    I can't wait to get my hands on this one! I tried to play it first on the PSX, but I didn't enjoyed the interface... I'm kind of new to the SMT series. The First game I played was Digital Devil Saga 1 and 2 as soon as they were released, after these ones I played Persona 3, Devil Summoner, Persona 4, and Nocturne, which, by the way, I didn't liked too much.

  • paristepes

    Posted Aug 13, 2009 5:58 am PT

    i can,t wait

  • 13thGuards

    Posted Jul 14, 2009 9:18 am PT

    I definitely need to get my PSP repaired quickly so I'll be able to play this one. after playing P3 FES, P4, P2, and Devil Summoner 2, there's no way I could pass this one up!

  • Midnightshade29

    Posted Jul 13, 2009 5:57 pm PT

    This game is going to rock...I never heard of this game back in the ps1 era.... i just recently got P3 (as i just got a ps2 as my ps3 don't have bc) Back in the day i had so many ps1 rpgs... everyone that came out in stores before mid 2000... so if this came out after that time it would explian why i never seen it.




    To all the people saying..."too bad I don't have a psp ...blah blah blah"

    You need to get one!! Stop using that as an excuse. If you love ps rpgs like this Final Fantasy 7, FF1 , FF2, FF tactics, Parasite Eve, Valkrie profile, Jeanne Darc, Dungeon Siege, D&D tactics, Legends of Heoros 1,2,3 Star Ocean 1 and 2, Tales of the world. Crimson Gem Saga, Vahalla Knights, Monster Hunter freedom 1,2 and unite, Y's 6, Phantasy star portable, kingdom hearts and these are just some of the rpgs... not to mention the only way you will be able to experience the full Final Fantasy 13 experience with FF13 Agito, and FF Dissidia is coming out next month... there is no reason not to buy a psp... and like i said this is just the rpg genre. The psp is loaded with games, only xbots and nintendoids will say otherwise.

  • montblanc512

    Posted Jul 11, 2009 10:46 pm PT

    Masao's asian again! good thing because if he had his old NA version I'm fairly sure there would be some very angry black gamers.

  • meowww

    Posted Jul 11, 2009 10:00 am PT

    It will be the best RPG game this year.

  • kkdgreyt

    Posted Jul 11, 2009 9:30 am PT

    I'm new to the series,, but seems interesting,, I'll take a stab at it,,

  • slayersdeath200

    Posted Jul 11, 2009 3:13 am PT

    WOOO can't wait till its released. Now i can say that its really worth getting a psp

  • xunhallowed

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 2:24 pm PT

    @gormo4

    I wholeheartedly agree. Best reason to buy a PSP.

  • xunhallowed

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 9:45 am PT

    @TrueProphecy

    I wasn't talking about remote play; I think that remote play is terrible. Now the PSX emulator on PSP is another story.

  • moj_yakusoku

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 9:44 am PT

    awesome! another game to look forward to, i really hope it's in UMD format! =D

  • rewriteu

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 8:57 am PT

    i wait this game. very philosophy series and very good - talk to demons! wow i never seen before this in JPRG games! ^_^

  • rizalariff

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 4:14 am PT

    can't wait!

  • agodan

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 2:27 am PT

    " We're not even sure we want to know what happens when a demon becomes angry or scared. "

    In Persona 2 when a demon becomes angry allways attacked me and never wanted a conversation, a scared demon often run away after a few words.
    It depends on the demons and characters style, what reaction will be after the conversations, so it has each demon style his own character combo.
    Example : if you choose x, y, w characters in exactly in this order, then the b,h styled demon will allways be friendly.

  • agodan

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 2:07 am PT

    I have P2 - EP, P3, P3 FES and P4 !
    Fantastic ! Atlus remasters this classic -japanese only- playstation game for psp, and all in english language ! incredible ! :-))))
    Must have game for me.

    Is it really Nate in the first Persona too ? Since one of the second characters was Nate in the Eternal Punishment.

    Difference between P2 and P1 is that P2 all is in fully 3D isometric graphic.

  • nerd_assassin

    Posted Jul 10, 2009 12:20 am PT

    Wee! Finally another reason to borrow my brother's PSP.

    Well, I got a DS.

  • TrueProphecy22

    Posted Jul 9, 2009 6:06 pm PT

    @ xunhallowed

    Remote play is a great feature, but you can't ignore its limitations. You have to have a PS3, have your PS3 in Remote Play mode, be somewhere with internet access, be personally at your PS3 to change disks on multi-disk games, you can't play later games that require dual analog sticks, and then to top it all off, there's going to be lag - so you can't play twitch based games.

    I use remote play all the time to play PSX games, but it's just no match for actually having the game in your PSP.

    PS: Anyone else hear, "Lucky!" "Whoa! What the hell? Where'd the road go?" in that video?

    I know he says "Where'd the room go." but after the girl yelling "Hold on!" in an empty hallway during an earthquake, I was inclined to hear something else stupid before the video was over.

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