Some RPGs have unforgettable stories for players to lose themselves in. Others have jaw-dropping combat to keep players entertained for hours on end. But then there are the rare ones where the people — the ones players bicker with, flirt with, and sometimes accidentally set on fire — completely steal the spotlight.
Party members can make or break a role-playing experience. They’re not just side characters; they’re the heart, soul and comic relief of the journey. From snarky rogues to brooding warriors with emotional damage, these are the RPGs that got the party formula just right.
7 Tales Of Vesperia
Every Party Needs Fools
The Tales series has always been about friendships that evolve through fireballs and fishing minigames, and Tales of Vesperia has a cast that gels in a way that feels organic. They argue, support each other, and somehow survive Yuri’s constant sarcasm without storming off.
Yuri Lowell isn’t the usual bland anime protagonist. He’s jaded, morally flexible, and ready to solve problems with his sword when diplomacy fails. Pair him with Flynn, the idealistic knight who actually s the rules, and the sparks fly. Then there’s Judith, the quiet Dragoon who’s hunting ancient weapons while being cooler than everyone else in the room. Even Repede, the pipe-smoking wolf-dog, somehow ends up feeling like a full-fledged member of the group. And yes, that dog can carry his own in a boss fight.
What helps is the skit system — fully voiced, often hilarious conversations that pop up between cutscenes and dungeons. These aren’t filler. They let players watch the party grow close over everything from cooking disasters to serious moral debates, all without breaking the pacing of the main story.
6 Divinity: Original Sin 2
When Everyone’s a Main Character
Party members in Divinity: Original Sin 2 aren’t just sidekicks. They’re potential protagonists with full-fledged story arcs, personal vendettas and more baggage than a royal carriage. Any one of them could be the star of their own RPG, and if players choose not to make a custom character, they can be.
There’s Fane, a sarcastic undead scholar trying to unearth the secrets of his long-dead race. Lohse is a bard with a literal demon inside her. Ifan is an ex-mercenary turned lone wolf sniper. Sebille is a former slave out for blood who can stealth her way through a fortress. Each one brings unique quests, skills and dialogue options that branch depending on how players interact with them and the world.
And the real kicker? They can disagree. Refuse to do something and they might walk. Push them too far, and they might stab someone that the player wanted alive. Larian didn’t just give these characters good backstories; they made them feel alive, unpredictable and morally messy in a world that’s already spiraling into divine war.
5 Chrono Trigger
Time-Travel Shenanigans, Lifelong Friendships
Some RPGs make players wait ten hours to meet someone interesting. Chrono Trigger, though, introduces a sentient robot and a prehistoric cavewoman with a tailspin roundhouse kick within the first few hours. And somehow, every single party member feels essential.
Lucca is the genius inventor who builds time machines and burns down enemies with fire magic. Frog is a cursed knight with a tragic backstory and the most heroic theme song in the SNES era. And Magus, the enemy-turned-ally, feels like recruiting Darth Vader after a boss fight.
The time-travel structure means players see different sides of these characters depending on where and when they are. They aren’t just along for the ride; they’re tangled in the fabric of the world’s history. And while Chrono Trigger keeps the group size tight, it uses that space to make every interaction meaningful, with optional scenes that flesh out relationships and deliver emotional gut-punches even without full voice acting.
4 Final Fantasy 7
Avalanche Might Be Eco-Terrorists, But They’re Family
Even back in 1997, Final Fantasy 7 had a party lineup that was pure gold. Cloud’s identity crisis might have been the centerpiece, but the people around him made it sting. Tifa wasn’t just the childhood friend — she was the emotional anchor for half the game. Barret, a machine-gun-armed dad fighting for the planet, had one of the more raw and politically charged arcs in the series. And Aerith, the cheerful flower girl, wasn’t just doomed love interest fodder; she was arguably the most powerful magic user in the party.
Then there were the wildcards. Red XIII, the talking wolf-lion who drops philosophy bombs mid-fight. Yuffie, a kleptomaniac ninja who, at one point, literally steals the party’s materia and bails. And Vincent, the optional vampire gunslinger with a dead lover and the aesthetic of a Hot Topic manager. Everyone brought something different to the table, narratively and mechanically. FF7 made sure no one felt one-dimensional, even if they joined late or by accident. The new remake only reinforced what fans already knew: this party sticks with you.
3 Persona 5 Royal
Classmates, Criminals, Confidants
It starts as detention, and ends with a heist crew that makes Ocean’s Eleven look like amateurs. The Phantom Thieves aren’t just high school students moonlighting as shadow-slaying rebels, they’re some of the most fully realized characters in turn-based RPGs. Each party member’s entrance hits like a mini-movie. Ann stands up to abuse at the cost of her reputation. Ryuji breaks free of a school that broke him. Makoto goes from top student to biker gang tactician. And Futaba, whose first dungeon is literally her own psyche, wrestles with trauma and self-worth.
Persona 5 Royal’s social link system deepens things even further. These aren’t just backstories, they’re full arcs where players see characters change, heal and grow. The Confidant ranks not only unlock combat perks; they give players windows into each person’s life outside the dungeon crawling and Persona summoning. By the end, it’s impossible not to feel like part of the group. They bicker. They text non-stop. They infiltrate corrupted minds and order burgers afterwards. It’s absurd, stylish and somehow deeply grounded.
2 Dragon Age: Origins
Who Needs A Therapist When You’ve Got a Warden?
What starts with darkspawn genocide quickly turns into a traveling caravan of chaos, romance, and magical baggage. Dragon Age: Origins thrives on its party dynamics, with companions who clash, flirt, and occasionally betray depending on how things unfold. Morrigan, the shape-shifting witch with a heart hidden under six layers of sarcasm, is one of BioWare’s most iconic characters. Alistair is the lovable himbo knight with daddy issues and some of the game’s best awkward banter. Leliana, a bard-turned-assassin, brings both religious fervor and the occasional song. And then there’s Shale, a walking mountain of angry stone who despises birds with a level of vitriol usually reserved for final bosses.
Every party member has unique reactions to decisions. Want to spare someone? Expect a disapproving grunt. Accidentally flirt with two people at once? Prepare for a tent-side confrontation that can end with hurt feelings and reduced loyalty stats. The campfire system lets players get to know their allies between quests, revealing secrets and unlocking new dialogue that can shift future outcomes.
1 Mass Effect 2
“I’m Commander Shepard, and This Is My Favorite Crew on the Citadel”
No surprise here. Mass Effect 2 is the high point of the trilogy and a masterclass in squad building. The entire structure revolves around recruiting and earning the loyalty of each crew member, which makes their fates in the final mission personal in a way few RPGs manage. Garrus, the former C-Sec cop turned Turian vigilante, has become the poster child for ride-or-die loyalty. Miranda is a genetically engineered perfectionist with daddy issues and icy charm. Mordin Solus sings Gilbert and Sullivan, and helped invent a biological weapon. And Thane, the dying assassin with a prayer for every kill, speaks in half-poetry and full heartbreak.
What makes the group so compelling is how different they are. Krogan warlords sit next to alien monks. Criminals and scientists share space on the Normandy, brought together by Shepard’s impossible mission. The loyalty missions dive deep into backstories, with everything from family drama to revenge arcs and ethical dilemmas. And then comes the Suicide Mission. Every decision, upgrade and relationship matters. Players who didn’t take time to understand and respect their crew? They pay for it. Literally. With body bags.