There's a moment in Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection where the game stops asking you to care about its characters and just... expects it. After twenty hours of battles, monster bonds, and political intrigue between the kingdoms of Azuria and Vermeil, the emotional weight of a particular story beat lands with a force I wasn't fully prepared for. That's the achievement of Twisted Reflection, and it's the reason this game sits comfortably above everything Capcom's Stories sub-series has previously managed: it earns its moments.
The foundation is familiar if you've spent time with Monster Hunter Stories 2. You're a Rider — someone who bonds with monsters rather than hunts them — navigating a world defined by conflict between two nations whose tensions have been reignited by a pair of twin Rathalos born under strange circumstances. The turn-based combat builds on the rock-paper-scissors head type system that made the second game satisfying, but adds layers of complexity that make each encounter feel like a genuine tactical puzzle. Monster movesets are more varied. The bond abilities available mid-combat are more powerful and punishing to misread. Boss fights in particular have a back-and-forth rhythm that reminded me more of a traditional JRPG endgame than anything in the Stories lineage.
The world is larger than previous entries and rewards exploration in ways that feel organic rather than mechanical. Rare monsters roam specific areas at specific times. New Monstie eggs can be found tucked behind optional side routes. Some of the most interesting story content lives in the margins — a side quest line about a researcher tracking migration patterns turned out to be among my favorite hours in the entire game. The full voice acting throughout, a first for the series on this scale, does a lot to hold the world together and gives supporting characters enough presence to feel like people rather than quest dispensers.
Not everything lands. The opening few hours move slowly, and the initial monster roster lacks the variety that opens up once you pass the first major story beat. Some of the mandatory farming sequences — particularly mid-game material grinds — feel paced for a handheld session rather than a console playthrough. And the absence of any multiplayer mode is a genuine disappointment; the bond mechanic between Riders feels like it was designed for cooperation that the game never delivers.
But these are complaints about the margins of a game that gets its core right with unusual consistency. Twisted Reflection is the kind of JRPG where you want to see what comes next — in the story, in the monster list, in the evolving bond system — and that pull doesn't relent for the vast majority of its thirty-plus hour runtime. It's the strongest entry in the Stories sub-series and one of the best JRPGs of 2026. For anyone even vaguely inclined toward turn-based RPGs, this is the one to play right now.
