![]() The third and last bundle that we’ll cover in this review, includes Kingdom Hearts III and its DLC called Re Mind. The second bundle includes three games: Kingdom Hearts Dream Drop Distance HD (a remake of the original 3D version), Kingdom Hearts 0.2: Birth by Sleep – A Fragmentary Passage, and Kingdom Hearts χ Back Cover (which is actually a movie that revolves around the story of the Foretellers from the series’ origins). This one was originally released as a phone game but got two remakes for the Nintendo DS, and later for PlayStation and Xbox. The last one in this bundle, Re:coded actually is much ‘younger’ but still dates back to 2010. ![]() A remastered version (named KH HD 1.5 Remix) was then released in 2013 for PlayStation 3. The original KH: Final Mix dates back to 2002, and was originally released for PlayStation 2. Some of these got HD remastered cinematics because as most of you know, these games are quite ‘old’ already. The first bundle includes no less than 6 Kingdom Hearts games and is definitely the most extensive one out of all four: KH Final Mix, KH Re:Chain of Memories, KH 358/2, KH II: Final Mix, KH Birth by Sleep Final Mix, and KH Re:coded. Four bundles were released on March 31st, of which we will cover three in this review. Luckily, 2021 is the year ALL Kingdom Hearts games were released for PC. Personally, I’ve always been a PC player who was in love with the idea of playing KG, and the Kingdom Hearts series have a tendency of releasing on various platforms, most of which I never owned, unfortunately. ![]() ![]() LifeisXbox’s Kingdom Hearts review | Under the motto: better late than never! So, the Kingdom Heart series, by Square Enix, finally came to PC earlier this year (still screams in excitement). ![]()
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