The game uses classical piano music and cutscenes loaded with real paintings and photography. It looks like Namco Bandai’s Eternal Sonata, which you may know better as Trusty Bell: Chopin’s Dream, may be finding a home on the PS3, not just the 360. Bunin is a well-regarded pianist, but his work is composed and arranged by Motoi Sakuraba. One of the main things to like about Eternal Sonata is that it tends to use the work of Stanislav Bunin. Developed by Tri-Crescendo and featuring the music of Chopin, Eternal Sonata for the PLAYSTATION®3 computer entertainment system delivers amazingly detailed 3D graphics, a captivating storyline, an innovative action battle system as well as new playable characters, quests, music and more. A classic RPG experience with a specific twist (8.5/10) The games intriguing setup, character setting, and plot, though, very much make for an experience that is worth trying out and sharing. But there are a few graphics issues that remain, like some textures being black and others that flicker. It’s also got a very intriguing light/dark system that can play a massive role in how battles play out, and even how enemies appear. With PR 3458, this game gets a big FPS boost, and the first cutscene, which previously was a black screen (with Vulkan), now works. The games battle system revolves around musical concepts and bespoke character attacks.
While it takes ideas from many RPGs of the same era, especially the Final Fantasy series in many ways, Eternal Sonata is a game that really does play its own tune in more ways than one. When you want to play an RPG like this, you might find it hard to notice a game with a direct comparison.