Eiyuden Chronicle Rising May 2026
In the lead-up to Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes , the spiritual successor to Suikoden , fans were expecting a lot of things: 100+ recruitable characters, turn-based battles, and a sprawling political drama. What they likely weren't expecting was a 2.5D action-platformer about municipal bureaucracy.
It is a game that argues that the most important part of an epic fantasy isn't the war, the magic, or the dragons. It’s the carpenter who fixes the bridge after the dragon is slain. Eiyuden Chronicle Rising
Here is where Rising gets weirdly philosophical. Without ruining the twist, the game reveals that the earthquake and the magical "resonance" causing the problems are the result of a timeloop. You are, essentially, Sisyphus with a pickaxe. In the lead-up to Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes
But look closer. The writers used this simplicity to bake in world-building. The characters don’t just want materials; they want to open a fishing hole because they miss the ocean, or build a clock tower to remember a lost spouse. The monotony of the quests mirrors the monotony of actual reconstruction. In Hundred Heroes , you’ll recruit the stoic knight and the magical prodigy. In Rising , you help the potter find his favorite clay. It’s the carpenter who fixes the bridge after
The final boss isn't a demon king or a rival empire. It’s a lonely, grieving entity holding a shard of a "primal rune." The resolution isn't to kill it, but to convince it to let go of the past so the future can exist.
This loop could be tedious, but Rising understands a fundamental truth of human psychology: You aren't just grinding for a stat boost; you’re grinding to give the blacksmith a roof. You’re fighting wolves so the old lady can open a bakery. The game gamifies civic pride. The "Side Quest" Problem as a Narrative Strength Critics panned the game’s heavy reliance on "Fed-Ex" quests (Go kill 5 slimes. Now go kill 5 birds. Now go get 3 ores). And yes, the NPCs have a shocking inability to pick up things that are ten feet away from them.
You play as CJ, a young adventurer with a magical "jump button" and a serious case of loot-goblin-itis. She arrives in the dilapidated outpost of New Nevaeh, fresh off an earthquake, and is immediately roped into a reconstruction effort.
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