Overall I enjoyed the Kingdom Hearts 3 Re:Mind DLC and finding out about the endings and what it could hold for the future of the series. The Re:Mind DLC was not long, but I didn’t really expect it to be long at all as it was just neat wrap up to a great story so far. The Limit Cut Episode brought a lot of questions, and I have so much speculation with how it ended, which I’ll not state here in order to avoid spoilers. I did not like high level requirements for the Limit Cut Episode, but I love the game so I will level up to unlock the endings for myself. Either way, the KH3 Re:Mind DLC was very cinematic with its cutscenes, and a very enjoyable DLC for a very enjoyable game.
Kingdom Hearts 3 Re Mind is designed for true fans of the series, being the Final Mix that fans were waiting for. But its high price, even for the most loyal ones, is undoubtedly its weakest and most critical point.
An absolutly perfect dlc, literally everything you de want from a kingdom hearts dlc, more story, more boss fights, more playable characters, fan service everywere, and a total of 13 super bosses and 1 super super boss that fix my main problem with the game, these fights are brilliantly difficult and so fun to learn.
The Re:Mind scenario is only appealing to two types of fans: players that haven't played Kingdom Hearts III yet or those that already mastered the game and want to challenge themselves on the hardest bosses in the series.
Overall, Re Mind is disappointing. Between all the reused content and very few additions to the story, I felt like I wasted my time. Yes, a few new threads and pieces of info are there to unravel, but they are the tiniest of crumbs. The biggest revelation is in the new secret movie, which shows the series potentially moving in a strange direction that makes me more uneasy than excited. Ultimately, you really have to dig for the fun in Re Mind, because it’s buried in all this content you’ve already played.
Even as a longtime fan of the series who adored Kingdom Hearts 3, it's hard to muster up any sort of enthusiasm for Re:Mind. What's more, Re:Mind made me understand Kingdom Hearts 3's story even less, which is a testament to how bonkers it really is. It's not all that surprising this happened; after all, it's Kingdom Hearts. Nevertheless, Re:Mind is an incredibly peculiar expansion that simultaneously falls flat and partially obscures the brilliance of Kingdom Hearts 3.
I think the package is a bit expensive for what it offers. For 30 Dollars/Euros you get
- like 3-4 hours of new story, which is recycling elements and bosses from the ending of the base game
- 14 Superbosses, which are in my opinion very well done and super fun
- A photo generator where you can place characters on maps how you want to do photos
- ez/pro codes for the base game to add replayability
The package is all in all well crafted and the new renditions of the soundtracks are great.
If you are not a big Kingdom Hearts fan who buys everything day 1 anyway, but still want to get new content and new bosses, I would recommend to wait for a price drop.
I think the content is worth like 15-20$
Even if this was good, it's nowhere near the amount of content that one would imagine getting for 30 bucks. It fails on that alone, but also falls prey to the KH series worst pitfalls of story. Thankfully the boss battles do deliver, though the chance to play as other characters falls flat, considering they all control worse than Sora by leaps and bounds. This should have been better, or cheaper.
It is not a 10.
My opinion is based on what it offers for € 30, I don't care if the Limit fights are great or that the final part with the two fights and the scene of a certain character is the best thing they have done in KH3, all that does not cost the price that they have set, and less having paid KH3.
KH3 Re: Mind expands the story of the final stretch of KH3 by giving some "answers" in a way that Nomura loves, halfway. Do not expect great revelations in this part, that, as always, will expand it in other games and, surely, not even there will give a clear answer (See all the **** Unchained story arc that has already been four years and has hardly resolved anything).
His fetish with which we look at the box is almost morbid, I do not know if in Limit or later they tell you what is inside, but that reminds you at the beginning of the DLC itself that exists and that what is inside is super mysterious and then not tell you anything It makes me nervous (And remember that it is an element that has been seen since KH Unchained, so he has been talking about the box for three or four years).
Limit cut, subjectively, I don't like it because of the peak of difficulty they have put in, it gives me that it is because they are the same fights that they programmed in Maestro but taking away statistics, and that shows that the issue of difficulty in KH3 has been taken by EVIL since the beginning. At the beginning it was "an easier game for everyone to play and pass on the story" (said by a member of the KH3 team) but now, suddenly, that does not matter even if you play even in passive, Limit Cut does not You pass if you do not become a pro player, and there is story about the game so they comment.
Objectively it seems to me the best that the DLC has, fighting against challenging bosses that will let you squeeze your combos and skills as you had not seen so far, but that does not automatically make it 10, Re: Mind comes in this DLC and is a " fudge "to increase the duration and to be able to put in the trailer that you play with other characters (That removing one or two fights, it is not worth it).
I recommend that if what you want is history, you watch videos on YouTube, if on the contrary you want a challenge in terms of gameplay it refers (which is a bit sad that you have to pay so that finally a boss kills you in Expert ) I would recommend that you wait to see if they lower it, because that challenge is not worth the 30 they ask for.
SummaryRe Mind—The other tale that unfolded during the climax of KINGDOM HEARTS III. Determined to rescue Kairi, Sora travels to the Keyblade Graveyard a short time before the final battle was to take place. Lacking a corporeal form, he traces the hearts of the seven guardians of light. Through experiencing their personal battles firsthand, Sor...