Polygon and Eurogamer both confirmed it at the June Direct: Final Fantasy Resonance is the first HD-2D RPG built for mobile, picking up the Brave Exvius framework and giving it the Octopath Traveler treatment. The HD-2D style (sprite art layered on top of HD lighting, depth-of-field, particle effects) lives at Square Enix for now, but the genre adjacent to it on Android is healthy. Square has been quietly bringing its classic RPG library to mobile for years, and the result is a phone library full of pixel-driven JRPGs that look better than they ever did on a CRT.

We ranked seven HD-2D RPG apps for Android. Some are true HD-2D Square Enix output, some are pixel JRPGs from the era HD-2D evokes. Every pick runs natively on Android with no emulator setup required.

What to look for in an HD-2D RPG app

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planStarting priceStandout
Octopath Traveler: CotCTrue HD-2D on mobileFree with gachaFreeAuthentic HD-2D engine
FF Pixel RemasterClassic pixel art definitiveNo$17.99 per titleBundles Final Fantasy I-VI
Dragon Quest VIII3D classic in your pocketNo$19.99First true 3D DQ
Chrono TriggerGenre-defining time travelNo$9.99Multiple endings
Star Ocean: AnamnesisReal-time action mobile RPGFree with gachaFreeLive action combat
Romancing SaGa 2Non-linear classicNo$17.99Generational ruler system
Live A LiveEight-story anthology RPGDemo$7.99 (free chapters)Multiple eras

The 7 best HD-2D RPG apps for Android

1. Octopath Traveler: Champions of the Continent — best for true HD-2D on mobile

Octopath Traveler: Champions of the Continent is the only true HD-2D RPG on Android right now. Square Enix built the mobile version with the same engine that drives the console Octopath games, so the lighting, depth-of-field, and sprite work are identical to the console experience. The story is original to mobile (it predates the events of the first console game), and the gacha layer is generous enough that free-to-play players can clear most of the campaign without paying.

The combat uses the same Break-and-Boost system as the console entries. Eight travelers, eight unique job paths, and a strong roster of character stories make this the cleanest match for the Final Fantasy Resonance experience.

Where it falls short: Gacha for top-tier travelers can be slow. Some side content gates behind PvP or co-op participation. Long-form story still launches in seasons rather than as one block.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: The only authentic HD-2D experience on Android. Start here if visual style is the priority.

2. Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster — best for classic pixel art done right

Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster is Square Enix’s definitive way to play the first six mainline Final Fantasy games on mobile. The sprite work is the original Famicom and Super Famicom art remastered by Kazuko Shibuya (the original sprite artist), with new orchestral arrangements of the Nobuo Uematsu soundtracks. There is no gacha, no in-app purchases beyond the base game cost, and the bundle covers thirty-plus hours per entry.

For HD-2D fans, this is the source material. The pixel art that inspired the HD-2D aesthetic is preserved here in its highest-quality form on a mobile device.

Where it falls short: Each title is sold separately at $17.99, which adds up. No HD-2D layering, just clean pixel art. UI scaling on small phones could be sharper.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, PlayStation, Switch

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: The cleanest pixel-art Final Fantasy bundle on mobile. Start with FF VI if you only buy one.

3. Dragon Quest VIII — best for the first true 3D DQ

Dragon Quest VIII: Journey of the Cursed King is the entry that took Dragon Quest fully 3D for the first time, and Square Enix’s mobile port preserves it intact. The Akira Toriyama art style translates well to phone screens, the 60+ hour story is one of the most loved in the series, and there is no live-service nonsense (one-time purchase, no IAP).

For HD-2D fans, this is the bridge between the pixel-art era and modern 3D, with the warmth and tone the genre is built on.

Where it falls short: Touch controls work but a Bluetooth controller is preferred. Long sessions push battery harder than pixel-art entries. Some camera quirks in tight areas.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: A definitive Dragon Quest experience that respects mobile constraints.

4. Chrono Trigger — best for genre-defining time travel

Chrono Trigger is one of the most acclaimed JRPGs ever made and Square Enix’s mobile port (after years of patches) is now the best handheld version. The 1995 original used Akira Toriyama character art and a Yasunori Mitsuda soundtrack that is still cited as the genre’s high-water mark. Active Time Battle combat is fast, the time-travel story has multiple endings (13 in total), and the New Game Plus loop is one of the originators of the mode.

For HD-2D fans, this is the era HD-2D is referencing. The pixel art is hand-crafted at the same height as anything Square Enix has shipped since.

Where it falls short: No HD-2D layering, just the original sprite art (with some smoothing options). New Game Plus content unlocks demand multiple full runs.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, Switch, PlayStation

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: The best 30-hour JRPG you can buy for $10 on a phone.

5. Star Ocean: Anamnesis — best for real-time action mobile RPG

Star Ocean: Anamnesis brings the Star Ocean series’ real-time action combat to a four-character party on Android. Touch controls drive a single hero while AI handles three party members; you tap to swap mid-combat. The character roster is gacha-based but the campaign content stays accessible for free-to-play players.

For HD-2D fans who want something that does not require turn-based patience on a commute, Anamnesis is the fastest pick.

Where it falls short: Live-service structure with seasonal events. Some events have time-gated rewards. Tri-Ace’s roadmap depends on Square Enix’s renewals.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: Action-focused mobile JRPG with deep character collecting if that loop appeals.

6. Romancing SaGa 2 — best for non-linear classic

Romancing SaGa 2: Revenge of the Seven is Square Enix’s remake of the 1993 SNES non-linear RPG. The generational ruler system lets your kingdom span multiple in-game generations, with heirs inheriting (and forgetting) skills based on choices you make. The remake adds modern QoL features without changing the systems that made the original a cult classic.

For HD-2D fans who want a JRPG with structure unlike anything else on Android, Romancing SaGa 2 is the most distinctive pick.

Where it falls short: Lore is dense and the systems are not signposted. New players can get stuck without consulting a guide. Combat balance can swing wildly with succession choices.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Switch, Windows, PS4, PS5

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: The most distinctive JRPG on the list. Pick when you want a system you have not seen before.

7. Live A Live — best for an eight-story anthology

Live A Live is the 1994 Square Enix anthology RPG that finally got a modern remake. Each of the eight stories spans a different era (prehistoric, feudal Japan, Wild West, near-future, far future, present day, sci-fi distant future, mid-Edo) and each has its own combat twist. The remake uses true HD-2D visuals (the same engine as Octopath Traveler) — making it one of the few HD-2D titles that runs natively on Android.

For HD-2D fans who want variety in a single purchase, Live A Live is the anthology answer.

Where it falls short: Some chapters land harder than others; the prehistoric chapter and the far-future chapter divide opinion. Sub-chapters can feel short next to mainline 30-hour JRPGs.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Switch, Windows, PS4, PS5

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: The second authentic HD-2D title on Android, with story variety no other JRPG matches.

How to pick the right one

FAQ

What is HD-2D exactly?

HD-2D is a Square Enix art style that layers high-resolution sprite art over modern 3D rendering (depth-of-field, dynamic lighting, particle effects). Octopath Traveler defined it in 2018; Live A Live and the Dragon Quest III remake brought it to more genres.

Is Final Fantasy Resonance available on Android?

Final Fantasy Resonance was announced at the June 2026 Direct as a mobile entry built on the Brave Exvius framework. The exact release date depends on region.

Which is the best free HD-2D mobile RPG?

Octopath Traveler: Champions of the Continent is the most authentic HD-2D engine that is free to start. Star Ocean: Anamnesis is free but uses different visual style.

Can I play these without a controller?

Yes. All seven picks support touch controls. A Bluetooth controller is useful for the Dragon Quest VIII port but not required.

Do any of these need an internet connection?

Octopath Traveler: CotC and Star Ocean: Anamnesis require persistent connection for live-service features. The Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster, Chrono Trigger, Dragon Quest VIII, Romancing SaGa 2, and Live A Live run fully offline after install.

Which has the smallest install size for limited storage?

Chrono Trigger is the smallest at around 700 MB. Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster titles are 1 GB each. Octopath Traveler: CotC is the largest at 5 GB plus.