Tales of Xillia Remastered: A Comfortable Return to Rieze Maxia
When a game you loved on an older platform reappears on modern systems, the question is rarely “should it be released?” and more often “how should it be released?” Tales of Xillia Remastered answers that with a pragmatic, player-first approach: keep the heart of the 2011 classic intact, polish the rough edges, and add conveniences that make a 50+-hour JRPG feel less like a relic and more like a ready-to-play favorite.
This remaster isn’t trying to reinvent the wheel. Instead, it smooths the bumps—auto-save, waypoint markers, skippable cutscenes, easier access to the Grade Shop—so both veterans revisiting Jude and Milla and newcomers discovering them for the first time can focus on what matters: characters, combat, and story.
What makes the remaster click
- The Dual Raid Linear Motion Battle System still hums: combat remains responsive, action-oriented, and satisfying to tame.
- Quality-of-life (QoL) upgrades remove friction: modern features like auto-save and better mini-map usability let you slip into the game without fighting legacy UI.
- The character-driven narrative and skits retain the series’ charm: Xillia’s cast is the remaster’s emotional engine, and their interactions still land.
Why this remaster feels “right” now
Tales of Xillia arrived originally on PS3 (2011 in Japan, 2013 internationally) and some of its systems aged alongside the platform. With the Remastered release (October 31, 2025), Bandai Namco wrapped in the game’s original DLC, improved visuals and performance options, and sensible QoL features that reflect modern JRPG expectations. That makes Xillia accessible in ways the PS3 release could never be for today’s players—no awkward backwards-compatibility gymnastics required.
A quick tour of the good stuff
- Combat: Tight, fast, and still the highlight. The real‑time party synergy and combo systems hold up, and the remaster doesn’t mess with what works.
- Accessibility: Options to disable random encounters, add waypoint markers, and skip cutscenes let you pace the game how you like—important for a long, story-heavy JRPG.
- DLC and extras: Including previously released costumes and items in the package gives fans the complete experience without hunting legacy content.
- Visual/performance upgrades: Cleaner visuals, smoother framerates, and modern platform support make exploration more pleasant.
Where the Remaster still shows its age
- Some systems weren’t thoroughly modernized: certain map and menu systems remain clunky, and the pleasure of “shopping around” is diminished when store browsing is overly streamlined.
- Titles feel depersonalized: shifting character titles into generic, achievement-like items loses some of the personality and narrative flavor they had in earlier Tales games.
- Design quirks persist: a few dungeons and the mascot character Teepo still divide opinion and remind you the core design choices are original, not reimagined.
The bigger picture: remasters, preservation, and limits
Remastering a decade-old JRPG is rarely simple. Developers sometimes must hunt for source code and assets scattered across studios or lost to time—Bandai Namco has admitted the process can be messy. The Tales Remaster Project has prioritized titles that are quicker to bring forward, which explains why Xillia landed now rather than as part of a full chronological reissue. That pragmatic approach yields accessible releases more often, though it can mean some old limitations remain.
There have also been practical release hiccups: some physical editions (notably an Xbox physical edition) ran into last-minute cancellations in certain regions, underscoring real-world distribution constraints even as the digital remaster reaches multiple platforms. These issues don’t change the product itself, but they shape availability and fan sentiment around a nostalgic relaunch.
What fans and newcomers should expect
- Veterans: A smoother replay with flexible difficulty and save options. Bring your knowledge of the story and combat, but leave time saved for exploration if you want the full emotional beats.
- New players: An approachable entry to the Tales series—especially since the remaster bundles the original’s strongest elements with modern niceties and the DLC extras.
- Completionists: Expect familiar progression systems; some UX choices (titles, menu layouts) are more streamlined now, which can be a plus or a minus depending on how much you liked old micro‑systems.
Taking stock: the highs and lows in one bite
- Highs:
- Faithful combat that still thrills.
- QoL features that dramatically reduce tedium.
- A lovable, character-focused story that rewards investment.
- Lows:
- A few interfaces and systems feel dated or overly simplified.
- Some personality in small mechanical touches (like character titles) was lost.
- Distribution hiccups affected physical availability in certain markets.
My take
Tales of Xillia Remastered smartly balances preservation and modernization. It doesn’t rework the game into something it never was; it refines the existing experience so that playing it in 2025 feels natural rather than archaic. If you care about JRPG storytelling, fast-paced party combat, and character chemistry, this is a remaster that respects the original while inviting new players in. It’s not flawless, but it’s a considerate and welcome next life for a solid entry in the series.
Sources
- Tales of Xillia Remastered Review | RPGFan — https://www.rpgfan.com/review/tales-of-xillia-remastered/
- Tales of Xillia Remastered announcement | Bandai Namco Entertainment — https://www.bandainamcoent.com/news/tales-of-xillia-remastered-announcement
- Metacritic — Tales of Xillia Remastered overview and critic aggregation — https://www.metacritic.com/game/tales-of-xillia-remastered/
- PC Gamer — Tales of Xillia coming to PC and modern platforms (coverage of remaster features) — https://www.pcgamer.com/games/rpg/over-a-decade-later-a-beloved-lost-instalment-in-the-tales-of-jrpg-series-is-coming-to-pc/
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Related update: We published a new article that expands on this topic — Tales of Xillia Remastered: Smooth Return.