HomeFeaturesGranblue Fantasy: Relink
Granblue Fantasy: Relink might be the king of chaotic JRPG combatPlatinum’s touch certainly hasn’t deserted its fights with large skeletons
Platinum’s touch certainly hasn’t deserted its fights with large skeletons
Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/ Cygames
Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/ Cygames

Granblue Fantasy: Relinkhas been on my most anticipated games list for two-years, with all of my anticipation based purely off bitty trailers that haven’t revealed anything other than its flashy actionRPGcombat and deeply anime towns. So, I was rather excited when I had a chance to play it for all of ten minutes in one demo, then around 40 minutes at this year’s Gamescom.
Blazing fast mental arithmetic puts my total time with the game at around 50 minutes… with a catch. The two demos were identical, though, so all of my time was dedicated to smashing the same large skeleton and large rock man. I got to know them and it’s battle system intimately, I suppose, so while I can’t speak for the quests, but the fights? Gloriously chaotic.
Granblue Fantasy: Relink - PlayStation Showcase TrailerWatch on YouTube
Granblue Fantasy: Relink - PlayStation Showcase Trailer

Whether you’re a mage, a guy with a gun, or a hulking great lad with a sword, each fighting style has its own interesting quirks and combos. For instance, the gun boy let you build up a heat meter which would supercharge his shots, while quick follow-up spells with a mage would speed up their casts. |Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Cygames

Perhaps the combat’s fluidity is a bit unsurprising considering Platinum Games were developing the game before they handed off full control to Cygames in 2019. Director Yasuyaki Kaji tells me it was due to resourcing, not any ill will. But I was worried that the handoff itself may have meant a tragic loss of Platinum’s silky combat. Nope; Cygames have managed to retain Platinum’s signature approachable style, which makes it easy to look cool and pull off wild combos even if you’re not entirely clued into how things operate.
And much like my time with JRPGTales Of Arise, I did find my battles with skeleton man - and, later, boulder man - a difficult prospect to understand. But once I scanned the many flashing percentage bars scattered all over the screen, it largely fell into place. The general rhythm is very similar to Arise, in the way you’re meant to tag your enemies with basic attacks, build meters up, then press whatever buttons flash up on screen and go with the ensuing chaos of anime portraits and screams of things like “Chain Burst!”.
For the most part, Relink’s combat centres on syphoning enough juice from your attacks to satisfy your four-sided crystal in the corner. The first stage is hammering it until “Link!” pops up, which means you and your ally team up for a flashy bash. The next is to, from what I gather, press a shoulder button (I played on PS5) to toggle whether you’d like to activate one of four customisable skills you’ve got equipped. For instance, I could press R1, then either circle for a cool whirlwind slice, or X for a healing aura. Juggling all of this while moving and dodging is nicely balanced, too, and never once did I get lost in the visual noise.
The scale of these… |Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Cygames




The final stage of combat is waiting for two things to fill: an orange bar which lets you perform a cool move, and a flashing blue “Link!” bar, which also lets you perform a slightly less cool move. Crucially, if you and your mateys max out your orange bars in sync (which conveniently happens a lot) you’ll all take it in turns to Chain your special moves one after the other, everyone whipping across your screen in brief anime intros, unleashing honking great tornados and sequences of fiery swirls. When prompted, I’d get my turn and fulfil the chain, seemingly maxing out the enemy’s stagger bar so they’d topple over.
The hallowed “Link!” bar would let everyone dish out a chorus of over-the-top moves that would hoof a slowing zone onto an enemy and buff our attacks within it. Again, I don’t know how it’s actually triggered, aside from waiting for the prompt? The devs do say there’s plenty of combat explanations and training in the full game, so told me not to worry too much about feeling overwhelmed.
For more of the latest news and previews from Gamescom 2023, head to ourGamescom 2023 hub. You can also findeverything announced at Opening Night Liveright here.