TechRadar Verdict

Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown paints a picture of sustainable development as it infuses all the thrills of a modern AAA release into a smaller package. Heavy on ideas and experiments, this is top-notch.

Fluid movement

Strong visual identity

Thoughtful reinvention of metroidvania tropes

Parry timing is brutally unforgiving

Checkpointing can feel cruel

Why you can trust TechRadarWe spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best.Find out more about how we test.

Platform reviewed:PS5Available on:Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X|S, and PCRelease date:January 18, 2024

As soon as you wrap upPrince of Persia: The Lost Crown’s tutorial and get into the magical mountain where the meat of the game takes place, you’ll be hooked. This first hour or so is all movement, bouncing around to take the fight to the scores of undead that uneasily stride into your path in each room, and it’s hard not to fall in love with it.

This is the newPrince of Persia, the same as the oldPrince of Persia.The Lost Crownis a two-dimensional side-scrolling action game that takes that 1989 idea of the originalPrince of Persiaand infuses it with metroidvania sensibilities. The end result has the same intensity as its genre stablematesDead CellsandMetroid Dread, butThe Lost Crownis its own beast, with a kineticism that outstrips any other metroidvania I’ve ever played.

New hero Sargon pinballs aroundThe Lost Crown’s open world as equal parts acrobat and dancer. Fights will often involve springing into a diving attack from a wall jump, knocking enemies up from the flagstones below, or parrying attacks with ease.

Honestly, though,The Lost Crownis better in movement but flails a bit when it asks you to get stuck in with the combat. Luckily, you spend most of the time holding down the right trigger to sprint around, barely stopping to brutalize the infinitely respawning enemies dotted around the map.

While there is some awkward friction, it’s hard not to seePrince of Persia: The Lost Crownas a bold and thoughtful blueprint for reinventing a franchise. While it’s not for this review to talk about the state of AAA game development, and I can’t claim to know how muchPrince of Persia: The Lost Crowncost to make, it feels like it’s blazing a trail for a world where more experimental visions of your favorite games can be tried out, instead of rote retreading of games everyone is, secretly, a little bit bored of.

Hail to the prince

Hail to the prince

If you haven’t noticed yet, movement is the most satisfying part ofPrince of Persia: The Lost Crown. Sargon is lithe and immediately has access to a full suite of movement-based abilities. From the very start of the game, he can wall jump, sprint, slide across cobbles, and sling himself through the sky, gripping metal rings and flag poles right out of the Super Nintendo classicAladdin.

You’ll unlock more abilities throughout the game; this is a metroidvania after all. But you never feel like you’re missing out in the way you do in games likeDying Light 2orMirror’s Edge Catalyst, where your movement is initially hampered. When you do get extra objects to help you get around, like a bow and arrow (mostly used for traversal and puzzle solving) or even air dashes, they feel like they’re adding layers to a fleshed-out set of skills rather than papering over glaringly obvious gaps that have been there since the start of the game.

Coming back to the openly derisive blacksmith god Kaheva after besting a particularly tough challenge they set for you, they go to call you a mortal again - as they have many times before - but then correct themselves, addressing you instead as warrior. It felt well earnt.

Combat is similar in that you’re given access to a variety of different moves. Your repertoire of abilities will let you knock enemies into the air or off ledges, and while the base attack is that same dull three-hit combo (that can be expanded into four later in the game), you’ll often be moving around instead of fighting from a stationary position, so you’ll rarely notice.

The problem with fighting inThe Lost Crownis more about impact. Even the lowliest minion can take a real beating, which feels at odds with how nimble you are. When it takes 10 hits to send even the most mediocre of enemies to the shadow realm, the rhythm of combat feels a little off. This isn’t as noticeable in the boss fights: those aresupposedto be hard to fight. But when the game throws a handful of enemies at you in one of several scripted fights, it’s a real chore when even ostensibly human assassins are shrugging off repeated sword strikes.

Combat is brutal, too. Enemies hit hard, so dodging and parrying are essential if you don’t want to get turned into a meaty paste. I’m bad at melee combat games, so it’s potentially a skill issue, but I found parrying to have a brutally short window and pulling one off successfully can be incredibly frustrating.

Upgrades - doled out by the titanic god Kaheva at her blacksmith or an old woman squatting in a tent - do little to make the combat feel punchier, and so I found the best option was just to avoid the fights as I explored.

Time to kill

Time to kill

Obviously, it’s aPrince of Persiagame post 2003’sSands of Time,so there’s a heavy time element. The story involves Sargon and his gang of ancient heroes wandering into a cursed mountain. There are no real surprises here, but the narrative is well-handled, and there are a few different side quests that encourage you to explore.

The aforementioned upgrade system is fairly by the numbers, with the addition of an amulet system that lets you pick up extra perks and slot them into empty sockets. More powerful amulets take up more sockets, and it can add a bit more customization to vary your playstyle. Personally, I was a big fan of an amulet that made every parry generate a little time bubble that slowed down enemies within it. I sucked at parrying, but it made parrying so valuable in encounters where you were getting swarmed that it made it worth trying to pull them off again and again.

There’s a wealth of accessibility options here. The option of a high contrast mode or subtitles (with several settings for font size and opaque backgrounds) feel well implemented and will greet you on first start up.However, there’s a host of toggles to change play, too.  Options to make tough platform sections skippable and combat easier will allow people to customise their play experience. Auto-aim can be adjusted, and assistance for targetting enemies in melee is also available.

My most memorable moments withPrince of Persia: The Lost Crownaren’t the story or the combat but the platforming puzzles of jumping through spinning buzzsaws and skipping like a stone through chambers filled with puddles of poison, whirling blades, and hordes of enemies. That dizzying sense of speed is the unique thing thatThe Lost Crownbrings to the metroidvania genre though, and it’s something that will keep me coming back to it again and again.

For more thrilling titles just like this one, check out thebest single-player gamesand thebest story gamesthat are all available to play right now.

Jake Tucker is the editor in chief of TechRadar Gaming and has worked at sites like NME, MCV, Trusted Reviews and many more. He collects vinyl, likes first-person shooters and turn-based tactics titles, but hates writing bios. Jake currently lives in London, and is bouncing around the city trying to eat at all of the nice restaurants.

Best Dragon Age games in 2024 - every series entry ranked

I reviewed the PS5 Pro and recommend these 7 enhanced games to try first

Another reason to avoid edge-lit 4K TVs: they may fail faster than others, according to this report