If Bandai Namco built a new entry from the ground up for PC/Switch 2/PS5, they could design the contract to include PC rights from day one. They could also follow the Super Robot Wars 30 model: sell the base game with Namco/Capcom/Sega characters, and sell Nintendo characters as paid DLC to offset licensing costs. For a native port of Project X Zone 2 on Steam? No. Put that hope to sleep. The licensing is too old, the 3DS code is too archaic, and Nintendo holds too many keys.
Features / Port Begging
Maybe. If Bandai Namco sees the success of Tactics Ogre: Reborn and Front Mission 1st , they might consider a "Project X Zone 1+2 HD" for consoles only (Switch/PS5), skipping PC entirely. project x zone 2 pc
The realistic path forward is not a PXZ2 port, but .
Let’s address the elephant in the living room. Project X Zone 2: Brave New World is one of the most ambitious tactical RPGs ever made. It’s a digital museum of 90s and 2000s gaming, featuring over 60 characters from Namco, Sega, Capcom, and Nintendo. If Bandai Namco built a new entry from
It also remains trapped on the Nintendo 3DS.
Would you pay $60 for a Steam port? Or are you hoping for a third entry instead? Let me know in the comments. [Footer: Follow us on Twitter for more #BringBackPXZ2 content] Features / Port Begging Maybe
Project X Zone 2 on PC: The Crossover Dream That Needs to Escape the 3DS
Would Nintendo allow a game featuring their IP (Fiora, Chrom, Lucina) to launch on Steam, where their competitors live? Absolutely not. For PXZ2 to hit PC, Nintendo would either have to be cut out (removing those characters) or be paid an astronomical sum. Cutting the Xenoblade and Fire Emblem reps would gut the game's appeal for many fans. Given these hurdles, a direct port is unlikely. However, hope isn't dead. Look at what happened with Namco x Capcom (the PS2 prequel to PXZ). It never left Japan. Instead, we got Project X Zone on 3DS.
RetroRogue | April 17, 2026
The 3DS eShop is dead, meaning physical cartridges are $100+ on eBay. If you want to play it on PC right now, the only option is Citra (the 3DS emulator). It runs surprisingly well at upscaled resolutions, and you can map the touch screen to your mouse. Final Thought Project X Zone 2 is a love letter to a specific era of gaming—when crossovers were messy, sprite-based, and absurd. It deserves to be preserved. But until lawyers invent a time machine, that letter will remain sealed in a 3DS cartridge.