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With enhanced gameplay, an expanded cinematic story, the return of the battle styles from Yakuza 0, more nightlife spots, and re-recorded audio by the series cast, Yakuza Kiwami is the ultimate and most “extreme” version of the original vision of the series, now optimised for PC with 4K resolutions, uncapped framerates, customisable. Yakuza Kiwami 2 is an action-adventure video game developed and published by Sega. It is a remake of the 2006 video game Yakuza 2, and is the series' second remake title following 2016's Yakuza Kiwami. It was developed using the Dragon game engine from Yakuza 6.
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In 2017, I played two new Yakuza games. In 2018, I’ve played two more, with a Fist of the North Star spinoff on the way. The latest, is a modernized remake of, made in the new Yakuza 6 engine.
Life is good.When the PlayStation 2 version of Yakuza 2 was originally released in North America in 2008, I didn’t dare envision a future so rich with Yakuza content that I could spend two years living almost exclusively in a virtual Japanese neighborhood, immersed in a world of bad-but-good suits, bicycle-smashing brawls and deeply meaningful slot car races.I also couldn’t imagine being among so many other Yakuza initiates — so many friends with whom to share screenshots of business chickens and zombie dances. The world has changed in the time between Yakuza 2 and Yakuza Kiwami 2 — as much as the game itself has changed between iterations.Yakuza Kiwami 2 functions as a sort of “greatest hits” in terms of gameplay. The Dragon Engine from Yakuza 6 returns, which means a seamless open world and hilarious physics-based combat (in other words, you throw a guy and he knocks all his friends over), now bolstered by returning content from previous games.Yakuza series protagonist Kiryu has access to a larger library of context-sensitive, cinematic “Heat Action” attacks than he has in the last few games, including some from the PS2 release of Yakuza 2 that recruit locals to help Kiryu in a street fight. Sometimes one man isn’t enough; he needs someone to toss him a plunger. Kiryu can, as in the PS2 game, keep weapons he takes off of enemies, and have them maintained by the resident weapon doctor, Kamiyama. This feature, missing from recent Yakuzas, adds a lot more possibility for weapon experimentation.
UFO Catcher machines are back. The cabaret club management is back from Yakuza 0. Beloved, snakeskin be-jacketed madman Goro Majima is back in both a new version of the RTS-ish “Clan Creator” game from Yakuza 6 and his first playable scenario since Yakuza 0. Golf is back. There is, as always, an arcade full of Sega classics to play, this time beautifully emulated versions of Virtua Fighter 2 and Virtual-On, joined anachronistically by Toylets. If you’re not familiar, Toylets is Sega’s real-life urinal gaming system, localized in North America for the first time and playable via Kiryu’s digital bladder.Most importantly, Yakuza Kiwami 2 offers a balance of two opposing forces, held together by self-aware videogaminess: intense drama featuring intense dadly themes, and absurd substories that shine a light on the silliness of the Yakuza world’s residents, turning Kiryu into a kind of street-level superhero who will always be there when someone needs emergency underwear or emergency voice acting services.
Yakuza 2’s story is considered one of the best in the series, with a villain who remains memorable and intimidating even after Yakuza 0 retconned him into a pants thief. As in the previous Kiwami, Sega got the cutscenes right the first time, opting just to remake them shot-for-shot in the new engine rather than change the substance. One location in the original game has been cut (and its content moved into the existing cities), and there was some hostess club stuff that has been replaced with the Yakuza 0-style club management game, but overall this Kiwami remake is additive, feeling like the excessively overstuffed playgrounds I’ve come to love. The Yakuza games, rankedThe series is having a moment right now, thanks to Sega’s breakneck localization of, and the freshly released Yakuza Kiwami 2. Like a man casually walking down the street in an eye patch, a snakeskin jacket and no shirt, the series is suddenly drawing a lot of attention. Yakuza has been a mainstream hit in Japan since 2005, but today, the average person might need a little help differentiating all the prequels, sequels and reboots.It’s likely that Kiwami 2 will be the first version of Yakuza 2 that many people play; the Yakuza fandom has grown significantly since 2008, and Kiwami 2 is in a better position to find an audience — if only for the simple reason that it’s being released on a more active platform.
Yakuza 2 was released on PlayStation 2 in 2008, two years after the PlayStation 3 came out. There’s less lead time between the Japanese and Western releases as well.
We waited two years for that localized release of Yakuza 2; Kiwami 2 is here eight months after its Japanese release. These speedy localizations are welcome for a community who had to wait three years for the eventual digital-only release of Yakuza 5 in 2015.The prequel Yakuza 0 provided an easy entry into the series, offering an introductory story that didn’t presume knowledge of who was lieutenant of which family within which clan, or whose betrayal of whom was avenged in a rooftop fistfight. “Prior to the release of Yakuza 0, the series was arguably lurching along with the misconception that it was a Japanese Grand Theft Auto, along with the numbering of the series, which created a massive barrier to entry,” Atlus director of production, and certified Yakuzologist, Sam Mullen told me. Everyone poops. SegaYakuza games are brimming with funny moments that work even better out of context than they do in the game, and the PS4’s share button is right there on the controller, ready to turn every perfectly localized joke into a tweet, and every tweet into new eyes on Kiryu’s exploits. Back in 2008, sharing a Yakuza screenshot was functionally impossible, unless you happened to have early video capture equipment, or you took a picture of your TV with your digital camera.The original Yakuza 2 was unfairly overlooked. Not every game gets a second chance like this: Instead of a late sequel to an underplayed game on a near-dead platform, Yakuza Kiwami 2 is following up on a series of extremely recent releases designed to be free from any baggage.
It leverages a state-of-the-art engine to present a story that holds up, with gameplay refined over a dozen years. It makes its debut on a console that makes it easy to share the moments that can really only come from this series.Let’s raise a glass of Yamazaki whisky to the new world.