![]() ![]() Persona 4: Dancing All Night actually has a story that you progress through and must follow in order to unlock more songs. These have requirements such as ‘complete X amount of songs with Y character’ or ‘Hit X amount of perfects in total’ etc… It’s all very arcade-like with no set structure other than having to complete a block of songs before the next block is unlocked. Outside of that, you unlock ‘social moments’ between the various characters through completing certain ‘tasks’. As such, if you’ve not played either of the games yet, there may be some mild spoilers as they discuss things that have happened previously. You’ve basically been brought to Club Velvet against your will, following the events which happened in their respective games. In terms of this collection though, Persona 4: Dancing All Night is the odd one out, so let’s talk about Persona 3 and 5 first. ![]() Persona 4 however, I must have spent over 150 hours on the Golden version on Vita, not to mention the 195 hours it took to complete Persona 5 last year! As a franchise, it used to be rather a niche series, but Persona 5 almost went mainstream with its massive – and well deserved – success last year. Personally, I’ve not played Persona 3, but I’ve heard nothing but good things about it. ![]() ![]() Especially when you jump into VR, which I’ll talk about later as there is PSVR support surprisingly. Okay, just to throw this out there, seeing the modernisation of the characters from Persona 3 and 4 on the PS4 sparks up the desire to get a full-on remaster of their respective JRPG games on Sony’s console. Yeah, we may have got dressed in the dark… ![]()
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