About a year ago I'd never even heard of Koudelka, but that's the thing about being friends with TransWitchSammy, you're gonna find yourself waking up at 3 in the morning with "play Koudelka, it's peak...!" being whispered from your vents.

It's actually surprising that it's taken me this long to discover Koudelka and actually commit to playing it, because it's such a mish-mash of my favorite fifth generation design tropes that it seems made for me. Survival horror exploration, JRPG combat, haunting pre-rendered environments, a story told with maturity and supported by excellent voice acting...? Shit, it's even got music by Hiroki Kikuta of Secret of Mana fame, and he wrote, produced, and directed the game!

It's clear Kikuta had a well-defined vision for what he wanted Koudelka to be, being so involved with the project that he embedded himself in vocal recording sessions, opting to have all releases of the game share the same English dub. Vivianne Batthika (Koudelka), Michael Bradberry (Edward), and Scott Larson's (James) vocal performances are excellent, at times loud and theatrical in a way that suits the sort of "stage play" quality of the game's cutscenes. Character models are scarcely more detailed than those in Metal Gear Solid, rough and limited in all the ways you'd expect from this generation. Metal Gear Solid's workaround was the Codec, which used cut-outs to help connect the player to the characters, but Koudelka rarely zooms in on its characters to show us their emotional state (outside of FMVs, which are used whenever the action becomes more complex) and instead lends weight to the actor's performances with body language. Kikuta's choice to have his cast further embody their characters through mocap gives Koudelka a look that's so rarely seen on the PlayStation.

Softening up the image with a good scanline filter is something I would definitely recommend if you plan to play Koudelka through emulation, which you almost certainly would have to do since Price Charting pegs loose discs at around 142$. Maybe I'm spoiled, but the low-fidelity models can clash against the densely detailed backgrounds when viewed raw, and like most PlayStation games, there's a lot of dithering. Hitting Koudelka with a good shader can help desaturate some of the colors, and I feel a more muted pallet makes the game look even better.

As impressed as I am with the story, performances, and presentation (after shaders), the gameplay itself leaves a lot to be desired. Navigating the mansion is pretty typical survival horror fare, but there is a distinct lack of puzzles that the player needs to directly interface with to solve. For example, you might find a lock that requires an understanding of the Greek alphabet to open, but Koudelka and her companions will simply glean the answer from a note and apply the solution automatically. There's a puzzle involving some very basic math to change the counterbalance on a scale and another that requires you to rearrange the position of some dolls, and that's about the most you get. At least doing laps through the monastery feels good even if there isn't much meat to the progression. The frustrating thing is, you can see the frame of a good survival horror game in here, Koudelka just doesn't embrace it.

Likewise, the JRPG battle system is good but very dry. You navigate a sort of chess board where your position relative to the enemy's becomes a strategic factor... except magic and ranged weaponry is so grossly overpowered that by the middle of the game you'll probably have everyone outfitted with firearms and advanced spells, allowing you to comfortably take pot shots from the back row. Most battles devolve into spamming your more damaging moves, and while you can spec your characters however you wish, the short list of spells the game provides you bottlenecks your ability to craft particularly unique builds.

Koudelka has all these survival-horror and JRPG elements but it doesn't commit hard enough to either for my tastes, and so it rides out a lot of its short runtime on vibes and good storytelling, which is fine, but there's a better game here that just didn't coalesce.

I could go on, but at some point I'd just end up paraphrasing most of TransWitchSammy's video essay, which you should probably watch instead. She gets into a lot more detail about the production of the game, its themes, and stuff like the soundtrack (which is great), and I'd definitely defer to her as the resident Koudelka expert. I may keep going and give Shadow Hearts a shot, because I am interested in experiencing the series' transformation from this gloomy, mature story about religion, loss, and love to whatever goddamn goof-ass antics act as the driving force behind From the New World.

Reviewed on Apr 04, 2024


7 Comments


It's true, if I become your friend you start hearing my voice in your mind as I slowly convince you to play Koudelka and watch Kino no Tabi (2003)

I think it's a shame the team and Kikuta were pretty at odds in what the game from a gameplay perspective should even be cause I think with a more focused vision on that front it could've been even better but the fact that it's as good as it is already is like a huge testament to the quality of the whole entire rest of it.

I hope ya dig the rest of the series.......even From the New World..............

Also the manga is pretty cool!

24 days ago

@TransWitchSammy This'll sound shitty of me, but the manga's art does nothing for me at all. I think by making the characters look more stylish, something about the grittiness of Koudelka is lost. the more "realistic" portrayal of the characters in the game better suits the story and setting because koudelka is REAL, koudelka COULD HAPPEn

24 days ago

fucked up that the manga stars edward furlong
@Weatherby Yeah that's fair, I do think while it defo stylistically is a very different vibe, I think it ends up working out for the kinda thing it specifically is going for. But it does take away from the Black Narcissus/The Name of the Rose type vibes the game goes for.

24 days ago

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24 days ago

@curse Yeah, it's like the later Police Academy movies where they got away from what made it matter.

24 days ago

I bought this game maybe a year after it came out at a car boot sale with Breath of Fire III for less than a fiver each in almost new condition. Absolute Bargains! This was maybe in 2000? Still haven't beaten BOFIII despite liking it but Koudelka I've run through several times thanks to it's pleasantly compact length for a JRPG. The mixture of horror and RPG with it's narrative was such a fresh experience at the time. I love this game and the Shadow Hearts titles still very much.

24 days ago

@FallenGrace Breaking into your place to snatch up that copy of Koudelka and Panzer Dragoon Saga. Gonna retire young. Gonna retire TONIGHT!

But yeah, the short length is a godsend. I'm 130 hours deep into FFVII Rebirth and being able to just sit down and actually knock out an RPG in short bursts over about a week was refreshing.