![]() Kiryu earned the same amount of respect he gives everyone else. It’s not a Yakuza game without live-action boobs. Some characters from Yakuza 0 make direct appearances in Kiwami 2.Īh, yes. The saga also ties together a few loose ends, some of which set up the events of Yakuza 2 itself. On the other hand, it’s more Majima, which is always a good thing. It’s just an hour or two of cutscenes and straightforward fights. You can’t level up Majima or engage in side quests. The side story is short and incredibly stripped down. Unfortunately, this new offering is a bit of a let down. Moments like when fan-favorite character Goro Majima defuses a bomb using “eenie-meenie-miney-mo” do tremendous justice to an already larger-than-life cast. ![]() Yakuza Kiwami 2 keeps up the series’ tradition of stellar voice acting and what’s quite possibly an even better localization. The emotion behind those battles is as strong as ever, though. Whatever the case, Kiwami 2 sports some sharp difficulty spikes that most of the game’s combat doesn’t prepare you for. Maybe it’s a way to drag out what was otherwise the least-dense entry in the series. ![]() Maybe it’s because the remakes are translating much older theories of boss design than the more modern Yakuza 6 and Yakuza 0. That’s a problem that, for me at least, seems unique to the Kiwami remakes. Combat is more physics-driven than most other games in the series, and the progression system forces you to engage with Kiwami 2’s fictional cities of Sotenbori and Kamurocho more than usual in order to level up. This time, it’s all running in Yakuza 6’s Dragon Engine-bringing with it the graphical bells and mechanical whistles of that most recent release. And it cleans up pretty well! Like the previous Kiwami, this is a full-on remake of the PS2 original. There’s a car chase, ticking time bombs, a lady love interest (the only one in the series), and enough revenge schemes to fuel a whole season of television.īut now Yakuza Kiwami 2’s slightly forgettable bombast has been cleaned up for the PlayStation 4. It drags series lead Kazuma Kiryu-the lovable, titular criminal-into a more straightforward action-movie plot. It doesn’t quite capture the accidental magic of the first game or the blend of soap-opera drama and zany side quests that were perfected when Yakuza went HD with its third chapter. Yakuza 2 is a slightly strange chapter in Sega’s charming crime drama series.
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