This review's gonna be different, since I'm really just gonna recollect on this instead of getting into the nitty-gritty of the plot and mechanical workings of Sakura Wars 1. I do have a replay in-progress, but stopped around Chapter 5 since I was still focusing on other stuff at the time, so once I get off my ass and finish it, I'll make a(n actual) review talking about all that. Also there'll be some slight endgame spoilers, nothing major but I'll describe a few events that're isolated from context as much as possible.

Anyway, Sakura Wars. Originally one of my Gaming White Whales, I learned about it in 2016 when Sega revealed and got feedback on the large amount of people wanting a revival of the series, which it did 3 (4 for international release) years later in the form of a PS4 soft reboot. An adventure format? With VN and dating elements? Even containing SRPG combat sequences? Sounds like my thing! Only, there was one problem: Japan-only, no English translation available outside of guides. Hence why I referred to it as a white whale, there was no way I, someone still in their Junior year of high school, was gonna comfortably learn Japanese alongside other studies, and having to follow a guide for a text-heavy game is ludicrous to me. Granted, there was the anime OVAs of the games that had English subs, an alternate retelling of the first game via a Madhouse-produced TV series that aired overseas, as well as Sakura Wars 5 becoming available for PS2 and Wii versions thanks to NISA, but the OVAs are more or less continuations of the games so doing that would mean having little context, the TV series is a retelling like I said and I'd rather have gone through the original first, and the 5th game... I actually did pick up and put some amount of time into, but at the time of writing I've yet to finish it cause I keep getting distracted.

Then, in mid-December 2019, it happened. A group of people were able to finally translate the game, start to finish. Not even kidding when I say that was one of the biggest pieces of joy I've gotten in recent years. Sure, it meant having to figure out Saturn emulation, configuring Mednafen and (at the time, I don't use this anymore) Retroarch, all at once, but man I didn't care, as long as it meant I could finally play the first entry in a series I've had my eyes on for so long, going through it on-and-off for other games, as well as to avoid burnout.

As you can tell from the score, it lived up to my expectations pretty comfortably. There were some drawbacks and questionable decisions that bog it down that, again, I'll get into when I finish my replay, but for the most part I got exactly what I was hoping: Great adventure walk-arounds with a soothing and fantastic atmosphere, blending nicely with the VN and dating elements of talking to crew within the Imperial Combat Revue, and the SRPG element that, while very simple (it cannot be stressed that combat sequences are not the main focus, the stuff pertaining to the crew and adventure/VN format is), was still pretty fun and hilariously easy to break.

What really stood out to me - and really, the series in general - was how earnest and sincere it was in telling its tale. Amongst all the banter, fun, and the of-the-times anime tropes and such, laid a story about trust, forgiveness, and standing together despite the differences and difficulties that lay face as it goes along. We're talking about a story that doesn't shy away from the fact that the (initial) Big Bad is just a Conservative mad about the fact Japan has been taking influences from the Western side of the world, wanting to isolate it from those they deem unholy. We're talking about a story that contains two individual moments practically resembling a Goku Spirit Bomb attack, purely because they believe and have the heart to stand above the evil. We're talking about literal, actual angels and demons getting involved in order to loop these themings and threads back around in a full manner. I won't act like sincerity is lost or whatever, but in the recent years where creators and even normal individuals have taken the route of irony, cynicism, and just never taking things as what they are and judging them for what they aren't, coupled with the fact that, to reiterate, I was finally playing this within the timeframe of early 2020, seeing something like this unfold, was pretty refreshing and breathtaking. It may not be exactly for everyone, but you can't deny there's a ton of heart and soul that goes into each entry, even the spinoffs, as time went on.

The only other games available in English are the aforementioned PS4 game, which I already finished and also like (though not to the same degree as this), 5, which as I said I need to get back to, and some spinoffs like the sequel to a previous Columns game, and a Game Boy title, which I also played and rather enjoyed nicely, with another translation being done for the third game, which I should mention finally being that 1, 3, 5, and the SR are standalone and can be enjoyed without prior knowledge of either game. I dunno when I'll sign back on, but since I already waited three years to delve into the series' roots, I don't mind waiting that much, maybe even more, for the title everyone beholds as one of Sega's all-timers.

Reviewed on Oct 21, 2022


10 Comments


Unrelated to this, I find the metadata for this listing to be really funny. The series in Japan is called Sakura Taisen, which does actually have a listing on this site named as such, making it the Saturn version. However, because most people overseas know it as Sakura Wars, they're gonna go to this page instead, which are the PC and Dreamcast ports. Nothing that matters at all, but it's really funny.

1 year ago

I've only played the 2019 game and have hugely mixed views on it. I love the art design and the music is truly wonderful. The theme song I'd just sublime. I absolutely hated the writing though, even as a JRPG fan I cringed continuously and the combat was lifeless.

I'd love to try the older games though.
Kohei Tanaka is involved with a good chunk of the series' outings, including this and the soft reboot, and I agree the music is excellent, some of his best works which is saying a lot considering how much work he does.

I have some qualms about the SR's writing but not particularly the tropes and comedic elements, growing up with anime and RPGs that contain these elements made me rather indifferent to how they work. Some were pretty bad though....

1 year ago

If you haven't already i'd suggest to also check out the anime, the OVAs in particular are really excellent.
By the way, there was literally no need at all to separate the different ports in pages with different names, IGDB never changes i guess
I did check out the first of the OVA, that being a prequel/interquel, and enjoyed it, especially with how it ties Ogami's status and role as the MC leading the troupe, coupled with how he's the extension of the player. I also watched the first episode of the alt-story TV show and it was really interesting to see how it's already different from the canonicity of the OVA & games, due to how Sakura gets introduced and involved within the troupe on her first week. I'm mainly waiting until I get back in the fix w/ the SW3 translation before I get further in at this point, I'm fine waiting until we get more info and other stuff within the series becoming more and more known, like that weird Dreamcast peripheral that almost became a thing for SWGB

1 year ago

I'm sure you're aware (but I just started playing this finally which reminded me of this review) that Sakura Wars 2 is also getting translated for the Saturn.
@FallenGrace Yep! Been aware of it since it was announced, now I'm just waiting patiently til it becomes available to patch it up myself... or use CDRomance's prepatch file if it's too involved. Should reaaaally get to replaying the first one soon, it'd be nice to go over what I like about the mechanics and atmosphere.
Hope you have fun with it btw, since I know your early outings with the franchise has been lukewarm

1 year ago

I'll wait on CDRomance lol.

1 year ago

I've tried getting this game running several times over the past year or so and I can never get the English patch to work properly on hardware. The version on CDRomance stutters on FMVs and freezes at the first strategy section, meaning I can't play it past the first like half hour. The next one I tried behaved the same way. Then I tried patching my own rom and it didn't want to burn right. The other rips I've tried seem to have the same problems as the CDRomance one. I'm using a Pseudo Saturn cartridge, but it's shielded so that shouldn't be affecting anything. I was able to get the Japanese version working, so it can't be that. If anyone has a working rom they'd like to send my way I'd be thrilled