Since its release in 2008, Persona 4 has been a bastion of modern RPGs, solidifying itself in gaming canon with not one but two anime adaptations, a rhythm game, two fighting games (that pleasingly connect to its predecessor, Persona 3) and a wildly successful follow-up in Persona 5. Fans have waited years for a PC port of Persona 4 Golden, an enhanced re-release originally for PlayStation Vita with hours of new content, not only because many in Western markets did not own Vitas but because of the possibilities that a PC version presented. For the uninitiated, the Persona …