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Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 Review

From the very first cinematic beat, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 hit me with that rare, delicate kind of beauty that makes you stop breathing just a little, like you have accidentally wandered into somebody’s half-remembered dream. This is a game that feels alive in the way a painting does, textured, resonant, layered with shadows and hope, and it’s not something you play so much as experience.

The narrative framework, one final expedition to stop a supernatural painter called the Paintress before she dooms every human over 33 to vanishing, isn’t just lore, it’s a philosophical heartbeat. It’s existential, which could feel pretentious if it weren’t grounded in such compelling personal stakes and character work.

Combat in Expedition 33 smartly defies genre laziness by blending turn-based strategy with real-time input. It’s tactical, rhythmic, and surprisingly kinetic, demanding not only planning but presence from the player.

Dodging, parrying, and timing skills within an otherwise turn-based structure gave me actual butterflies in my stomach during tighter encounters, something very few RPGs manage.

The characters, from Gustave to Maelle, Renoir to Verso, never feel like archetypes. They feel like people who carry literal and emotional scars, and that texture in their design made my heart hurt and swell at the same time.

The Belle Époque inspiration manifests not just visually but thematically, there is an old-world elegance haunted by impending doom that resonates deeply as the clock ticks down each year toward the Paintress’ new number.

One of the most striking accomplishments here is how the game leans into art theory, specifically clair-obscur, the French term for light/dark contrast, not just as a title but as its emotional and visual backbone.

Clipping issues and the occasional texture pop-in remind you that this isn’t a AAA behemoth, but rather a deeply ambitious project by a young, passionate team. Far from detracting, that vulnerability adds warmth.

The soundtrack is genuinely heartbreaking in the best possible way, every moment of triumph and loss feels framed by a score that gets what you’re feeling, sometimes before you do.

And yes, the art direction is one of the most luscious things I have seen this generation, sometimes dreamlike, sometimes haunting, always poetic.

Even navigation, absent a traditional mini-map, feels thematic. You’re an expeditioner wandering an unmapped world, and getting a little lost feels beautiful, not frustrating.

This game isn’t about rushing, it’s about pondering. About letting the world wash over you until you feel both small and inexplicably part of something vast.

Dialogue is careful, not verbose, it trusts your intelligence in a way too many RPGs forget. The silences in conversations feel meaningful.

Combat balance isn’t perfect, a few builds can feel very powerful, but it didn’t diminish my enjoyment, it invited creativity instead.

The enemies are inventive and strange in all the best ways, like something out of a surreal painter’s fever dream.

The notorious superboss Simon is terrifying, and the stories of players beating him with every hit taken without cheesing are proof of how rich and deep this combat system truly is.

The pacing isn’t always perfect. There are moments where camp interactions and cutscenes stretch the momentum, but I grew to love that slower heartbeat, it gave the world weight.

Exploration feels like peeling back wallpaper from a forgotten house, every area has a secret, a story, a whisper that rewards curiosity.

The base world itself, from the Island of Visages to the Forgotten Battlefield, feels like a gallery of masterpieces stitched together by folklore and fate.

This is not a fast game. It is an earned game. It demands patience, and it spoils you for it.

Some might find the story nonlinear elements confusing at first, but that ambiguity is intentional, it’s a tapestry, not a timeline.

There’s a raw emotional undercurrent woven through every chapter that made my chest tighten more than once.

Maelle’s arc, especially, left me misty-eyed because it’s both tragic and triumphant in ways that feel earned.

For players who love narrative, this is not skippable. The writing embraces poetry without ever feeling pretentious.

If the Belle Époque aesthetic doesn’t seduce you immediately, the worldbuilding will. It makes history and fantasy feel like two sides of the same wonder coin.

Technical wrinkles exist, yes, but they’re overshadowed by the heart behind every pixel.

The voice acting across English and French options is polished and expressive, adding depth to every line.

I keep thinking about moments long after closing the game, and that’s the mark of something special.

Secondary quests here rarely feel like filler, they feel like lived experiences, like stories within a story.

There’s enough content that you can get lost for dozens of hours, and even then I found corners of the map I hadn’t revisited.

I laughed, I teared up, I built strategies until my eyes crossed. This game imports emotion into mechanics in a way few games manage.

Some will debate difficulty, and yes, the final boss can feel easier if you have outleveled the content, but I think that’s part of its charm.

The post-game builds, mods, and community experimentation keep things spicy long after credits.

The love players pour into this game echoes in every corner of its community, and that’s the best measure of impact.

Expedition 33 is an RPG made by folks who love the genre but aren’t afraid to reinvent its heart.

At its core, it’s a meditation on time, legacy, and the interplay of shadow and light, both in life and in art. I finished it feeling richer, changed, and intensely grateful for having played it.

This is one of those rare games that doesn’t just stay in your library, it stays in your mind. And honestly, I can’t wait to see where the Clair Obscur universe goes next.

Game Information

Title: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33
Developer: Sandfall Interactive
Publisher: Kepler Interactive
Original Release Date: April 24, 2025
Reviewed On: PlayStation 5
Score: 9.5/10

“Clair Obscur doesn’t just ask you to explore its world, it invites you to feel it, to carry its brushstrokes home with you.”

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