
GENRE: Rpg, Turn-Based Combat
PLATFORM: PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Switch 2, PC
DEVELOPER: Iridium Studios
PUBLISHER: Annapurna Interactive
RELEASE DATE: April 2026
Short intro
People of Note is a bold turn-based RPG musical where combat plays out like an interactive stage performance. Each battle blends classic turn-based strategy with rhythm-timed inputs, evolving “musical” conditions, and flashy genre-mashup attacks. You play as Cadence, an aspiring pop singer building a band of wildly different musicians—because in the world of Note, musical style is power.
Story overview (light spoilers)
After being shut out of the Noteworthy Song Contest, Cadence realizes a solo act won’t be enough to earn her spot. She travels across the world of Note—from the rock city of Durandis to the EDM city of Lumina—recruiting eccentric, powerful performers to form the ultimate band. But as the journey grows bigger, a mysterious disturbance called the Harmonic Convergence begins disrupting the world’s musical energy, hinting that darker forces are working behind the scenes to break Note’s natural harmony.
Gameplay Mechanics (People of Note)
People of Note is a turn-based RPG musical where every battle is framed as a live performance. You play as Cadence, recruiting musicians across the world of Note and using genre-based abilities to build a band that hits hard and harmonizes well.
Turn-Based Battles with Musical Structure
Combat is turn-based, but it’s presented like a musical number—your turns are shaped by a rhythmic structure (often described through time-signature-style turns/actions) so you’re thinking about tempo and pacing, not just raw damage.
Rhythm-Timed Attacks (Real-Time Inputs)
On top of choosing actions, the game layers in rhythm-based timing—you can land stronger effects by hitting inputs in time, making fights feel like strategy + performance instead of traditional menu combat.
Genre-Bending “Mashup” Synergy
Each party member represents a different musical style, and the fun comes from combining them. Mixing genres creates mashup attacks and team interactions that reward smart party composition—more “build a setlist” than “pick the strongest spell.”
Band Building and Party Progression
Outside combat, the core progression is recruiting new musicians and expanding your ensemble. That gives you new roles, new combos, and more ways to approach encounters as the game opens up.
Loadouts, Modifiers, and RPG Customization
You’ll also strengthen the band with RPG-style upgrades—equipment and modifiers that shape what your characters can do, letting you tune your team toward safer control play or flashy burst turns.