Talion
Talion is a 3D fantasy mobile MMORPG built around PvP, with large-scale faction conflict sitting at the center of its progression loop. You play as a chosen hero fighting back demonic forces in Nar, running quests and dungeons for gear while regularly being pushed into open world skirmishes, alliance battles, and realm-scale modes. Combat leans into flashy, combo-driven skills, and like many mobile MMOs it supports automated play for grinding and routine content.
| Publisher: Gamevil Inc. Playerbase: High Type: Mobile F2P 3D MMORPG Release Date: September 15, 2018 Pros: +Robust character creation with plenty of sliders. +Showy, combo-oriented combat. +Auto-combat and auto-questing for hands-off grinding. +Strong emphasis on PvP and faction conflict. Cons: -Few classes and gender locks limit variety. -Automation can make progression feel passive. -Familiar, grind-heavy structure. –Server latency can be noticeable (servers located in Asia). |
Talion Overview
Nar is in trouble again, with demons pressing into the world and forcing its defenders into constant war. Talion frames you as a rising champion who strengthens their body through Ancient Dragon blood and then chooses a side in an ongoing conflict. You can align with Aegis, the Alliance of Shield Protection, focused on safeguarding freedom, or join Bident, the Alliance of Flame Judgement, which seeks overwhelming strength and control.
Progression follows a familiar mobile MMO route: accept quests, clear instanced dungeons, and continually replace gear as your power climbs. Class choice is straightforward, with three options that cover classic roles, Kyle for heavy melee damage, Velletrin for fast and agile fighting, and Pell for spell-driven offense. The moment-to-moment play is designed to look dramatic, with large skill effects and combo strings that make even routine pulls feel energetic.
Where Talion tries to stand out is how often it encourages conflict with other players. The world supports persistent faction PvP, so you can be interrupted by enemy players while traveling or grinding. On top of that, there are more structured PvP modes built around alliance vs alliance and realm vs realm matchups, giving competitive players a place to fight when open world encounters are too chaotic. For PvE-focused sessions, grouping with friends or guildmates to challenge field bosses and endgame raid dungeons is the main way to chase rare equipment upgrades.
Talion Key Features:
- Persistent Faction vs Faction PvP – The open world is not entirely safe, and rival faction players can turn routine questing into sudden fights.
- Top Notch Graphics – Unity-powered visuals deliver crisp environments and bright skill effects that feel impressive for a mobile MMORPG.
- Auto-Questing – Automation can handle combat and objectives while you manage upgrades, inventory, and other tasks in the background.
- In-depth Customization – Character creation offers a wide set of sliders, letting you fine-tune facial features and overall proportions.
- End-Game Raid Dungeons – Cooperative raid content is a major source of rare gear, and it is best tackled with organized groups or guildmates.
Talion Screenshots
Talion Featured Video
Talion Review
Coming soon!
Talion System Requirements
Minimum Requirements:
Operating System: Android 4.4 and later, iOS 9.0 and later.
Talion Music & Soundtrack
Coming Soon…
Talion Additional Information
Developer: UTPlus Interactive
Publisher: Gamevil Inc.
Engine: Unity
Closed Beta: May 24 – June 5, 2018
Release Date: September 15, 2018
Development History / Background:
Talion is a fantasy 3D mobile MMORPG created by UTPlus Interactive, a Korean studio, and released globally by Gamevil Inc. Built in Unity, it aims for a high-end mobile presentation, combining detailed visuals, big combat effects, and voice work to sell its cinematic style. Before launch, the game ran a closed beta from May 24 through June 5, 2018, followed by a pre-registration period that led into the worldwide release on September 15, 2018. The original target date was September 12th, but the release was delayed a few days due to app store synchronization issues.


