Yakuza

aka: Ryu ga Gotoku
Moby ID: 24425

PlayStation 2 version

Unrivaled.

The Good
Game very quickly thrusts you into a fairly simple gameplay and promising storyline. But what at first seems just to be promising really pays off to the fullest it makes you no wonder why they made a movie after this game.

You play Kazuma Kiryu, a yakuza dragon well known by all your enemies, if only for his hard fists and unrivaled stamina. Your enemies fear you, and your subordinates want to be like you. But you don't get to enjoy the status for too long, as you decide to take the blame for killing the boss to save your best friend and the woman you love. Thus game fairly quickly fast forwards to 10 years later as you get released from the prison, only to realise a helluva lot has changed since.

Game focuses mainly on martial art fighting, although there are certain enemies that wield firearms, as well as you can, but that just breaks all the fun. And it never gets old to use any bystanding object to crush your enemies with, especially when in rage mode. After each battle you are left with HP you finished the battle, it won't refill on its own... you can check the restaurants or buy an ice cream to recover your health, as well as you can buy various food supplements or potions that will help you recover even during the battle (although with max 9 slots for items, and 4 slots for weapons).

Car chasing scenes, battling in the arena, taking on the street hoodlums, hitting on the girls, checking on the striptease clubs, fighting a horde of enemies at once, confronting the Yakuza, confronting the Triad, confronting the police, it's all there, and that's just the surface. The story has many twists and surprises up its sleeve, and gives you just as much action elements as a touching moments. SEGA put a lot of effort not just in the story, but to hire some well known actors to do the voices, such as Michael Madsen, Eliza Dushku, Mark Hamill, Michael Rosenbaum, Rachael Leigh Cook, and a few others.

Game is split into 13 chapters, and there are lots and lots of cinematics in each of them, available to watch once your finish the game or during your staying at the hideaout. So elements known only in the MGS franchise creating a feeling of playing a movie is present. Game has lots of subquests and lets you roam freely through the town with an exact element like in Shenmue series thus propelling this game even higher. It combines well action and adventure elements with story progressing pretty fast making you guess will there be anyone left out there after all this.

The Bad
During the fighting, locking onto enemies is not that good, making you often punch the air instead, and since Kazuma has to finish his combo, enemy has plenty of time to come behind you and strike you where it hurts the most.

Also, some of the bosses can see a bit silly almost like having unnatural skills, with a bit strange balance as to when you can hit someone or not even without being in the guard mode, but after a few attempts, it is all passable nonetheless.

The Bottom Line
Making me write a review after years of not writing any just shows what an impact this game left on me, I guess. I'm still looking forward to try the sequels, even if they don't get released for Europe. When you first start playing, it may seem this game will soon end, but it constantly gets you mistaken and lasts and lasts for a good while even if you don't take any subquests or spend time on exploring around. I guess the structure of this game is closest to Shenmue games, it seems almost the same with a different setting and less fighting moves, but much more cinematics. Maybe it's just my feeling, but this game doesn't seem to gain much on the popularity... alas, I hope that will change, especially with sequels... or maybe I'm just getting old and keep liking the games that seem like overran by the time. Be that as it may, I think this is an experience that will leave you satisfied if you can overlook past some fighting elements.

by MAT (241259) on February 25, 2012

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