Summary
- Final Fantasy features overarching stories with sequels and mini-series spanning the franchise's history.
- The Ys series follows protagonist Adol across multiple entries.
- The Legend of Heroes: Trails series tells a complex, interconnected story spread across twelve games, requiring extensive knowledge to follow.
Thanks to the likes of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, it feels like every big franchise has been turned into a "universe" now. Want to understand the plot of the latest entry? No problem. Fans just need to spend a few dozen hours catching up on countless game tie-ins, TV shows, and movies. Not just a phenomenon in Hollywood, this need to add an overarching story to everything has long infected gaming too.

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But some genres have stood strong against it. Some of the longest-running franchises in all gaming are JRPGs, but surprisingly few of these games have overarching stories that last more than a sequel or two. Instead, the norm is to have entries that are either completely unconnected or only very loosely so. Yet some JRPGs do have incredibly complicated lore with stories that stretch over multiple sequels. The following games all feature some kind of overarching plot that plays out over multiple games.
We've ignored franchises where games are only very loosely connected, like Fire Emblem, as well as examples where there is only one sequel.
1 Final Fantasy
Multiple Entries Have Spawned Their Own Miniseries
Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy 13
As one of the longest-running JRPG franchises, Final Fantasy is famous for having sixteen main-entry games with completely separate stories. Outside some recurring elements, each entry in the franchise is completely separate. But there are exceptions.

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Within the franchise, there are at least a couple of overarching stories. For a start, the ill-received Final Fantasy 13 somehow spawned two sequels, both of which were considerably better than the original. Final Fantasy 13-2 followed Serah, the little sister of 13's protagonist, while Lightning Returns once again followed Lightning. Then there's Final Fantasy 7. This 90s icon has its very own universe called the Compilation of Final Fantasy 7. The original version of the game received three prequels, while the current remake series is spreading the original's story out over at least three entries (and whatever spin-offs Square Enix comes up with).
2 Ys 1-10 (And Counting)
Every Entry Follows The Same Protagonist, Adol Christin
The Ys series has been around since 1987. Over the course of ten games (and counting), the series has followed one protagonist, Adol Christin, as he adventures across the globe, constantly getting into trouble. Sometimes he's stranded on an island fighting dinosaurs; sometimes he's locked up in jail inheriting weird demon powers. The series is mainly known for being a great JRPG without turn-based combat, but each entry's story is also usually excellent.
Whether the franchise has an "overarching" plot is a little debatable. Technically, each game has a standalone story, but they all have the same protagonist and a chronological order. Later entries have also increasingly mentioned elements from older games, mentioned Adol's apparent character growth, and brought some old characters back. Put together, they tell the story of Adol and his many adventures. It also seems likely that at some point, perhaps when the series finally ends, Nihon will decide to release a game that ties together some of these titles retroactively in an attempt to reveal an overarching plot.
3 The Legend Of Heroes: Trails Series
Consists Of Twelve Connected Games Across Four Arcs
- Platform(s)
- PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, PC
- Released
- February 14, 2025
- Developer(s)
- Nihon Falcom, PH3 GmbH
The Trails series is a spin-off of the already long-running and complicated The Legend of Heroes franchise. When gamers talk about JRPGs with overarching plots, Trails is usually the first to be mentioned. And for good reason. As one of the RPG franchises with the most games, the lore of Trails can get pretty confusing. Each arc is set on the continent of Zemuria, with every arc spanning various feuding nations and focusing on a unique cast.

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While each arc tends to start fairly standalone, it soon becomes necessary to have an almost encyclopedic knowledge of the series if the player wants to know what's going on. As each arc progresses, more and more characters and story elements from earlier arcs crop up, making it more and more difficult to follow the overarching story. The result is a series that can be intimidating to get into, but one that can be very rewarding. For those who don't have an unlimited amount of spare time to play games, many fans suggest starting with either Trails from Zero or Trails of Cold Steel and then heading further down the rabbit hole.
4 Suikoden
The Overarching Plot Was Dropped After The Third Entry
Suikoden V
- Platform(s)
- PlayStation 2
- Released
- February 23, 2006
- Developer(s)
- Konami, Hudson Soft
Casual fans of the Suikoden franchise or those who have only played the later games likely have no idea that the franchise once had an overarching plot. Each entry in the franchise is set in the same world but follows a different protagonist and is usually set in a different part of that world. The most common returning themes are the 27 True Runes and the Stars of Destiny, elements the player is usually tasked with hunting down.
But the best Suikoden games were much more closely linked. Suikoden 2 is set shortly after the events of the first game and features quite a few returning characters and references to the first game's events. It's highly recommended to play them in order. More interestingly, the first three games held hints of an overarching plot that revolved around the mysterious nation of Harmonia and its church's goal of gathering all the True Runes. Sadly, after the third installment, the series' creator left, and subsequent entries ditched this overarching plot for a more standalone approach. It seems unlikely fans will ever get to see how it would have ended.
5 The .hack Series
An Alternate Timeline Story Revolving Around An MMORPG
-
- Top Critic Rating: 76/100 Critics Recommend: 50%
- Released
- November 3, 2017
- Developer(s)
- CyberConnect2
The .hack franchise is an interconnected mess of video game sequels, manga, and anime tie-ins that all tell an overarching story revolving around a fictional MMORPG called "The World." The franchise is roughly split into two "projects" that, while connected, tell different stories.
Project .hack was the first. Besides the anime and manga, it included three PS2 games that followed the characters Kite and BlackRose as they investigated what had put their siblings into a coma and how The World was involved. The second, .hack Conglomerate is set in a different iteration of The World and began with the three .hack//G.U. games, which then spawned several video game spinoffs, including a fighting game and more than one card game. Each game in the franchise has revealed more and more about The World and its reality-warping abilities, tying into a larger narrative that is ongoing.
6 Xenosaga Series
An Epic Six-Part Story Cut Short
The Xeno franchise has a fairly complicated history. It's made up of three separate series: Xenogears, Xenosaga, and Xenoblade. While most JRPG fans will be more familiar with the popular Xenoblade Chronicles games, they're likely less familiar with the former. That's a pity because both series were JRPGs that were ahead of their time.

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Xenogears was released for the PS1 in 1998. It was meant to be the fifth episode in a six-part epic, but the other episodes never got made, and to properly understand its story, one needs to read the Japanese-only book Xenogears Perfect Works. The Xenosaga series was then released for PS2 between 2002 and 2006. A spiritual successor to Xenogears, these games followed protagonist Shion Uzuku and her adventures through space, uncovering conspiracies. Each entry was self-contained but meant to build up to a larger, overarching story. Unfortunately, this story was never finished. The original plan was to have six games in the series, but only three saw release, leading to an unsatisfying ending to its overarching story.