Reviews from

in the past


See now THIS is how you do a persona cash grab babybeeeee

eu sou o melhor jogador desse game nao ironicamente

It hurts my eyes like no other game has done before

yes it has the most content but what if I just disliked all of it?

Great game if you skip the cutscenes and hate yourself


The story is truly fucking abysmal but come post-game this didn't leave my Vita for actual years, so fair's fair.

Played through the whole story in a plane ride to hawaii, skipped through every cutscene cause I'm not here for story, I'm here for gameplay.

[Ref Played 2023] I'd recommend to fans of Persona 4 with easy access to the game or who already like rhythm games
Pros: Just a bit of extra silly story with the Persona 4 cast, makes for funny gifs, the music works well in this context and the game is fun in a silly kind of way
Cons: The plot is kinda batshit even on Persona spinoff standards, cutscene quality is kinda jank compared to the gameplay sequences

Ooooh that music remixes are so damn GOOD.

Jumping back into the Persona 4 world with its charming cast of characters was delightful. Has an incredible soundtrack with some awesome remixes too.

I mean, listen to this fire remix and get lost in Elvis Teddie's dance choreography!

That's one thing that probably is downplayed the most in this trilogy of games too, but I must emphasize that the dance choreography in all of these 3 Persona games is really well done...

One only needs to watch someone take the dances from the games, and replicate them in real life, while cosplaying as the characters, to really appreciate it... and boy do they fit each character perfectly. And I happened to find a YouTuber that demonstrated that (see below) as I got lost in their videos:

CystAAHHL YouTuber - Persona Dancing videos
Dance with Nanako cover - my personal favorite from her list and the most adorable one that she performed... but saying that, her entire playlist is pretty damn incredible, even coming from a "non-dancer". I can appreciate her talent and dedication to the cosplay craft.

But anyways, getting back on track - this is easily the best of the Persona Dancing games, even if only because it has a legitimate visual novel / story mode.

de los mejores dancing de la franquicia de por lejos se mea a los otro la elecciones musicales son lo mejor...yo te perdono que en el fever que los good me los tomes para el combo

couldn't give a single fuck about the story but some of the remixes are just simply fucking insane

Story mode boring af but otherwise this is a fun time if you don't think about it too hard

Decent story, peak songs, some meh remixes.

Better music than P5 but the story is way too long and not very good

Moi qui m'attendais à être mauvais au rythm game mais à kiffer les musiques... j'ai eu exactement ce que je voulais !
Toute l'histoire est un peu trop verbeuse en revanche (en même temps, c'est Persona), mais c'était vachement cool à découvrir

Skipping all cutscenes like nature intended should have made this a slam dunk, but we've got a new problem now: Someone did not think this port through, and going from itty-bitty handheld to massive TV with no real adjustments was frankly horrendous. The game is still fun, but if your screen is bigger than the devs anticipated, prepare for frequent frustration.

There aren't enough songs. That's what sticks out once you clear the story and move onto Free Dance. Some of the choreography is weird but I'm not a dancing guy and your eyes are drawn away from it by the UI.

Story is bad, you can see why the later dancing games dropped the idea like a stone.

I have a light history with rhythm games, mostly in the form of genre hybrids like Metal: Hellsinger, Cadence of Hyrule, and Hi-Fi Rush. I do generally enjoy rhythm gameplay, and I very much enjoy Persona music, so I figured a game centered entirely on that would be an easy win. I did not entirely know what I was getting into with this one.

The biggest thing I didn’t expect was the story. There’s a LOT more than I expected. Taking place after the events of P4, the gang gets back together to perform in a music festival at the request of their resident idol, Rise. Naturally after they get there a group of meat themed idols that were meant to perform get kidnapped by supernatural forces and the Investigation Team is back at it to investigate and rescue them.

I was NOT expecting a proper Persona story here at all, but it very much felt like one. I mean the story starts with a little girl seeing her favorite idol committing suicide, so there ya go. Deeper themes, such as burying one’s own personality to appease others and depression are touched upon, as are the typical cheesy stuff like believing in oneself and the power of friendship. While not nearly on the scope of the game from which it’s spun off, it tells a deeper story than I’d expect, which would be great if not for its presentation.

There is a LOT of exposition and dialog, told through entirely static character portraits and textboxes. It is a slog to get through all of it, which is unfortunate given that I broadly like the story and characters. Similarly letting it down are the voice performances. I can’t explain why, but I never cared for Chie’s voice after the original P4, and Rise in particular sounds like she’s phoning it in. I know this is a portable rhythm spinoff of a series that doesn’t tend to have a super high budget regardless, but presentation does matter. If you’re trying to tell an involved story, especially in a genre not known for it, there should be at least something to look at while going through so much dialog.

Enough of that, you play rhythm games for the gameplay and music and it’s…interesting here.
As a song progresses there’s a circular border with six nodes around the screen, three on the left and right, that notes fly to from the center. The more accurately you time a note reaching one of the nodes the better your score. There are some notes you must hold for a time, others you have to hit simultaneously, and optional notes with a different input for bonus points. Some of the optional notes are special, where hitting them activates Fever mode, where your main dancer has a partner join for a bit with a harder set of notes to hit for more points. Mistime too many notes, you lose. Simple stuff.

There’s two modes of play, story mode and free play. Story mode has you go through a set order of tracks in a set difficulty, with cutscenes and dialog in between. In free play, various modifiers can be used to make songs easier or harder, such as making timing more forgiving or harsher, having notes fly faster or slower, fading them into view or making them outright invisible. All of that, plus several difficulty modes, impact your score. The better the score and thus rating, the more currency you get after the song which can be used to purchase those modifiers as well as cosmetics for your dancers. It all works well to incentivize you to master the songs and shoot for high ranks, and it’s satisfying ending a song without missing any notes.

That’s all well and good, but I personally feel these games are harder than other rhythm games I’ve played, and it all comes to that border. There’s a reason I couldn’t keep up with the songs past Normal difficulty. The border being around the screen means your eyes have to watch and travel around essentially the entire tv screen at all times, as opposed to most rhythm games generally only forcing you to watch over a relatively confined area. In addition, there’s also the matter of the dancing going on in center screen, which has tons of colors popping all over the place. Fun to look at, less fun when notes blend into the background without any options to alter the color of the notes or border. I feel like these issues were likely less prevalent with the game’s original hardware, it’s easier for your eyes to track everything happening on a portable screen, but it’s a lot to manage on a larger screen.

Unfortunately for a rhythm game, I’d probably say the music is the most disappointing part. Not including DLC both paid and free (MAN Atlus likes making some much stupid stuff as paid DLC btw), there are 27 tracks, the vast majority of which are remixes spanning the original P4 and its rerelease Persona 4 Golden, as well as spin-offs such as Persona 4 Arena and Persona Q. Not a particularly impressive number as is, but made even worse by the fact that there’s actually only 18 unique tracks, as the remaining of remixes of some of those, with one track even getting two remixes! With Persona 4 alone having 52 tracks, which doesn’t include Golden or spinoffs from P4, I don’t feel like it's unreasonable to have expected more. Additionally, while I understand that not all of P4’s tracks are exactly dance tracks, and the remixes are uniformly bad per say, I like P4’s music, so I would’ve liked even just the option to have the original versions of all tracks here.

I did end up enjoying my time with the game overall, but it’s not as easy a recommendation as I’d hoped. It was really nice spending more time with the Investigation Team, the dancing is fun to watch at least, and the gameplay is still enjoyable. But between a painfully presented story, aspects of gameplay better suited to other hardware, and a small, mediocre track list, I will say it’s not nearly as compelling as it could’ve been.

I'll be honest - if you're playing this game on a bigger screen, then you're at a disadvantage. This was probably one of the few rhythm games I played where I legitimately had to get used to how the notes appeared, since the basic UI is far too spread out to properly gauge everything at once. Get used to moving your eyes around in main gameplay. It feels awkward at first, but once you get used to it, it doesn't become too difficult a task.

A lot of people will remember this game for the Story Mode, which I can't blame them for. A lot of it is a repetitive bloated mess of the same rescue stories for a group of idols, and had admittedly only gotten interesting for once when the game at one point left the main cast to focus on Nanako and Kanami.

Actually, speaking of - it is nice to see Kanami in the flesh, who used to only be mentioned by name in the original P4. She adds a lot to the story, and I daresay she was what made the story interesting to begin with had it not been for the filler.

The songs, interactions, and even choreography in the game are all charming. The modifiers are also a welcome addition, since they easily allow for someone new to rhythm games to get into harder difficulties without pushing them out of their comfort zones, so long as they're willing to sacrifice a bit of lost change and score at the end of it all. Need I also mention the prospect of an easy Platinum Trophy this game poses? It took me a week's worth of days to get mine, and I had a blast doing it.

This next outing by the Investigation Team is a strange one. It embraces all that is weird about it and essentially uses it as fuel to blatantly add dancing and music at every corner. Normally, this would be horrendously stupid and obscenely strange a thing to do from a series as tonally serious as Persona and SMT - but this time: It gave us Nanako singing to the Junes theme, so I think we should all collectively clap at ATLUS for their almost heavenly gift.

mid ass story, but the song remixes and dances are amazing, it's my favorite of the persona dancing games. also the opening slaps.


Although I originally was pleased there was a story mode compared to the other dancing games, I very quickly got bored of the story mode. I also didn't like that playing the story mode had very little effect on your free play high scores or counting towards any other achievements, and I always go straight to hard difficulty, so the story mode was much too easy for me. I was not a fan of the new voice actors for Naoto and Rise but Kanji was a good replacement. The new character of Ms Ochimizu was interesting, but all of the other new characters were not.
Besides all of that though, this is in my opinion definitely the best of the dancing games by far. There are still a few dud remixes, but the music is overall amazing, and I like the new songs Calystegia and Dance! a lot. I also like the art style and how there's no cheesy/weird dances and you can skip through the story dialogue to unlock what you need rather than having to sit through the useless conversations with the characters. The rhythms on the songs feel the best on this one too, with less off beat weirdness than the other two. I would recommend playing if you enjoy rhythm games, otherwise the story makes it a skip.

this game was ridiculously annoying to get ahold of and idk why they had to make it so difficult but it was fun and charming as expected - if you love persona and rhythm games, it’s perfect for you!! i think this is the only persona dancing title with an actual canon main story in there so that was… interesting, it was long winded but i thought the VN style was cool at least. also if you get the dlc you can have THE hatsune miku join you, do i need to say much else?!

it did kinda suck that there’s no option for jp audio cause that’s how i played p4 originally so the switch to en voices was a little… jarring.

adachi voice i’m rockin’ it huh?

Me encantan los juegos de ritmo de juegos con excelentes OST, por eso no dudé en pillarme la colección entera de Persona. Además de ser extremadamente divertido, tiene una trama que no está nada mal y que te da ganas de seguir jugando. Genial.

the best of the 3 persona dancing games imo, the story... definitely existed but the songs were good and it felt like atlus at least cared a little more about this than 3D and 5D, also the snowflakes remix and calystegia are so good