For someone with a deep love of Japanese games, especially those focused on its aesthetics, culture and history, I was not especially fond of 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Ghost of Tsushima. Perhaps it was because of its dated and generic open world design, or the way it prides itself on how cinematic its samurai action looks rather than how it feels to play compared to Sekiro or even 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Rise of the Ronin. But it’s also partly down to a protective instinct over seeing Japanese culture, having spent decades being considered niche in the West, being appropriated by a non-Japanese triple-A studio. Yet with 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Ghost of Yotei, I’m more optimistic.

Of course, the game has only been announced recently with scant details, so I’m not saying it’s going to necessarily offer an improved gameplay experience (although when it comes to new IPs, sequels can often fix the problems of their predecessors, 168澳洲幸运ꦑ5开奖网:as was the case with Assassin’s Creed 2, as well as 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Uncharted 2 and 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Mass Effect 2).

While a lot of the online discourse has been over Ghost of Yotei having a new female protagonist in Atsu, I don’t really think g𝓰ender alone makes a game better or worse. Rather, it’s the jump to a few hundred years later and a new setting that most intrigues me. If it doesn’t fix the issues I had with the first game, it does feel like it provides a unique storytelling opportunity that an outsider like 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Sucker Punch is best placed to take advantage of.

Ghost Of Yotei Could Represent A Near-Extinct Culture Instead Of A Japanese One

Atsu entering an inn in Ghost of Yotei

I can see why Tsushima had its fans, at least for the surface-level aesthetic. It certainly loo꧒ked beautiful, especially when you consider it was a PS4 game. It also really doubles down on what we imagine when we think of samurai and Japanese culture. However, the much-touted Kurosawa Mode failed to convince me (I am begging people to watch the director’s Shakespearean masterpiece Ran, which was filmed in vibrant colour), while the inclusion of other cultural touchstones, like fox shrines, onsens, haikus, katana, and hwacha, many of which had not even been invented at the time, felt like fetishism disguised as reverence.

But there’s an opportunity for Yotei not to be ‘the Japan game’ again, but rather more distinct with something interesting to say. Something which isn’t necessarily going to be a glowing portrayal of the Land of the Rising Sun. Indeed, the setting isn’t even technically Japan but Ezo, a region north of the archipelago n🎃ation that is known today as Hokkaido, but which in 1603, the year the ga♕me is set, was still outside of Japanese rule. The name Ezo actually means ‘the land of the barbarians’ in Japanese.

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In The Old Days, We'd Have A Jin Sequel And Ghost Of Yotei

When we got one game a year, we'dღ be up to Ghost of Tsushima 4 by now, and probably more ready for ಌGhost of Yotei.

In other words, this was a land whose indigenous people, the Ainu, were othered by the Japanese who would make inroads to colonize the territory and subjugate them. From the early 1800s, the Ainu w♎ere subjected to forced assimilation, including the policy of separating Ainu women from their husbands to enter forced marriages with Japanese men. By the time of the Meiji Restoration (the birth of both a modern and imperialist Japan), Ezo was annexed under Japanese administration and renamed Hokkaido, while the Ainu people had their land taken away, and they were forbidden from speaking their native language and practising their customs and religious practises.

So why does this matter? I don’t think it’s a coincidence that Yotei is set in 1603 at the dawn of t𓆉he Edo shogu🌊nate period. While this government wouldn’t begin its colonisation efforts until later in that century, it means the game has the potential to depict Ezo and its indigenous inhabitants as they were, including th𒐪eir customs such as tattooing, fishing, and hunting, as well as a tradition of catching and raising bear cubs (that said, the only animal visible in the announcement trailer is a wolf). Rather than regurgitating a checklist of Japanese cultural tropes, this open world could instead shine a light on a near-extinct culture, whose pꦿeople were only formally recognized as an indigenous people by the National Diet of Japan in 2019.

Why An Outside Perspective Benefits Ghost Of Yotei

Ghost of Yotei lead brandishing their katana while wearing a mask

There are already signs of how this sequel subverts e🐷xpectations of a Japanese samurai adventure. The trailer’s score alludes more to themes from a Western, but is played with a Japanese shamisen, the same instrument that Atsu can be seen carrying on her back. It hints that the US developer won’t try to slavishly emulate a samurai movie,🐼 but also acknowledges the dialogue that samurai movies and Westerns have always had. Even the ability to master firearms means we can expect different combat styles that go against the samurai spirit (indeed, Atsu has not been explicitly referred to in any promotional materials as a samurai).

So far, the developers have only alluded that the story is one of “underdog vengeance” while the trailer alludes to Atsu being hunted by “every ronin”. But what if, in running away from her hunters, she finds refuge among the Ainu people, and in turn becomes their protector? Whereas Tsushima was about Japan fending off Mongol invaders, this time it could be the Japanese who are the invaders while you꧅’ve gone native.

It would certainly be a brave direction for th♕e series, maintaining its core pillar of having you play as a wandering warrior in a beautiful interpretation of Feudal Japan, while also critiquing Japan’s colonial past and challenging the notion of the Japanese national identity as one of ethnic homogeneity. It’s in fact the kind of critique a non-Japanese studio like Sucker Punch is best positioned to make, one that perhaps Japanese companies with conservative hierarchies dare not rock the boat on.

This is not something unique to Japan - the British education system likes to gloss over the brutal legacy of the British Empire. But it often takes an outsider to expose the darkness, such as how 💯blockbuster movies with the staunchest criticisms of American imperialism tend to come from non-A🔯merican filmmakers.

Personally, I love a lot about Japan but I’m not blind to its problems - one of my favourite shows is currently Pachinko, which follows a Korean family across generations as they immigrate to Japan and the oppression and discriminat🍷ion they’re subjected to in both the country’s imperial and post-war eras. That’s a healthy attitude to have, because holding any country or culture as being special or perfect can be naive, condescending, even dangerous. Whether or not Sucker Punch takes this direction with Yotei and succeeds is hard to say, but it will at least make it more interesting than Tsushima.

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168澳洲幸运5开奖网: Ghost of Yotei
Action
Adventure
Open-World
Systems
Released
October 2, 2025
Publisher(s)
❀ Sony Interactive Entertainment
Number of Players
Single-player
PS5 Release Date
October 2, 2025

WHERE TO PLAY

DIGITAL