How long is each yakuza game

After a short break from the service, "Yakuza Kiwami" has returned to Xbox Game Pass, along with "Yakuza Kiwami 2" and "Yakuza 0." With these three games returning to Xbox Game Pass, Xbox owners can play through the entire "Yakuza" series by subscribing. "Yakuza Kiwami" is a remake of the original "Yakuza" game in a modern, HD game engine. One of the better remasters, the modern version of "Yakuza Kiwami" is far superior to the older version. Improved visuals, combat, and voice acting make the updated original game feel vastly more modern than the ports of "Yakuza 3," "4," and "5."

The most recent game in the series, "Yakuza: Like a Dragon" received critical praise for turning the series into a great turn-based JRPG. While that game is designed as a jumping on point for new fans, you could play through the other seven games first. Here's how long it will take you to beat "Yakuza Kiwami."

According to HowLongToBeat.com, players who rush through the main story can be done in about 18 hours. Players who complete some side activities are looking at 33 hours, with full completion coming in at 83 hours. While the exact amount of time it takes to beat "Yakuza Kiwami" depends on the player, most will want to engage with the side content, as it's wonderfully weird.

There are side stories, which provide wacky detours from the main drama. Players can also fight Majima, battle in the underground tournament, participate in mini-games, and more. Despite taking place in a relatively small area, "Yakuza Kiwami" has all the bells and whistles of an open-world game. While players will likely gravitate towards the side activities in "Yakuza Kiwami," anyone planning on playing the whole series may want to rush through the main missions. However, the side activities are a core element of any "Yakuza" game, so it would be a shame for someone to ignore them in favor of powering through the main story.

It's never been a better time to be a Yakuza fan – if only due to the sheer amount of Yakuza games there are. Across the mainline series, prequels, remakes, and spin-offs, developer Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio has released 15 Yakuza games since 2005. But with that kind of output, it can be a little confusing to know where to start and in what order you should play the games (spoiler: not in release order or chronological order!). If you're thinking of jumping into this ever-expanding series before the release of Yakuza 7: Like a Dragon next month, but need a little help getting started, I've got you covered. 

Yakuza 0

The recent Yakuza renaissance outside of Japan, in a lot of ways, can be attributed to the 2017 release of Yakuza 0, the sixth main entry in the series. This is the best place to start your Yakuza journey.

Taking place more than a decade before the events of the first Yakuza game, Yakuza 0 reintroduces the series' characters, allowing new players to get to know its large cast and where each of them came from. The standout here is Goro Majima, playable for the first time, and given one of the better story arcs in the series. Later in the Yakuza timeline, Majima is a loose cannon and a bit of an oddball antihero, but in Yakuza 0 we're introduced to a subdued, almost subtle Majima and discover the life events that led him to lose control and become the person he is in later games. We're also given a chance to explore series protagonist Kazuma Kiryu's younger self, his role within the Tojo yakuza clan, and the friendships and relationships long-established in earlier games.

A lot of people point to Yakuza 0 as the best game in the series, and for good reason. It tells a mature story of trauma, love, and camaraderie and how all of those things can be intertwined with sometimes messy results. It also serves as the best introduction to the series’ characters, even better than the first Yakuza game, giving each plenty of screen time to explore their personalities and motivations. As such, it is a great place to jump in. Now that Yakuza 0 is also on Game Pass for Xbox One and PC, there's really no reason to not try it out.

Yakuza 6: The Song of Life

After you finish playing Yakuza 0, just jump all the way to the end. It's worth it, I promise.

Playing Yakuza games in 2020 can be all over the place. Like a lot of PlayStation 2 and early PlayStation 3 titles, some of the Yakuza games haven't aged super well. From a gameplay perspective, some of the older games are pretty clunky compared to their more recent, streamlined counterparts. Yakuza 6: The Song of Life does not suffer from such issues. 

The first game created in Ryu Ga Gotoku's Dragon Engine, Yakuza 6 is the first Yakuza game made for the current generation of consoles (Yakuza 0 launched in Japan on PlayStation 3), and adds a ton of quality-of-life stuff that aid pacing, like a reworked leveling system and the ability to take your fights seamlessly in and out of environments, which makes for more dynamic combat encounters. 

Yakuza 6 is also one of the series' best and most confident stories, amplified by the great visuals and motion capture employed through the Dragon Engine. Special mention goes to legendary Japanese actor and director Takeshi Kitano, who turns in an excellent performance as one of the game's main characters. 

While it may seem like a bad idea to jump to the end of a story more than a decade in the making, Yakuza 6 is built around the idea that it may be a player's first Yakuza game, and features a great in-depth primer on the series' story up to that point, allowing newcomers to jump right in and experience the best-playing Yakuza game to date without needing to wade through its previous baggage. 

Judgment

Judgment is a Yakuza game by technicality. It doesn't feature any of the characters from the main series, instead introducing its own new cast. But it does take place in the same universe and open world. And to date, it's the best cure for Yakuza burnout. Let's take a pit-stop here.

Until the release of Yakuza 7 in November, which introduces turn-based combat to the series, all of the Yakuza games follow a pretty similar formula: You walk around Kamurocho, the games' open-world city (based on Kabukicho, Tokyo's real-world red-light district). You get in random street fights, slowly progress the game's main story, do some wacky side quests, rinse and repeat. Even for the biggest Yakuza fan, this can get repetitive quickly, especially considering each game will take you between 30 and 50 hours to complete. 

Judgment doesn't wholly break from the Yakuza formula, but it does introduce enough new features that keep it fresh and interesting. Playing as private investigator Takayuki Yagami, Judgment features a bunch of new detective mechanics, like investigating a crime scene, participating in courtroom cases à la Ace Attorney, and tailing suspects alongside all the stuff Yakuza players have come to expect. It's a great twist on the usual Yakuza gameplay that allows this spinoff to sit comfortably alongside its predecessors. 

There are! And you should play them if you're itching for more Yakuza outside of the main storyline. Yakuza: Dead Souls, released in North America for PlayStation 3 in March 2012, is a pretty cheap purchase these days if you're buying pre-owned. 

Unfortunately, however, the majority of Yakuza spinoff games haven't made their way outside of Asia. Ryū ga Gotoku Kenzan! and Ryū ga Gotoku Ishin!, both set during Japan's samurai period, are only available outside of Japan through imports. Same with Kurohyō: Ryū ga Gotoku Shinshō for the PSP. Because of its gacha mechanics, Ryu Ga Gotoku has said the mobile spinoff Yakuza Online won't be coming to the West. 

Yakuza Kiwami and Yakuza Kiwami 2

Okay, we're back on track here. After seeing how the Yakuza story starts and ends, and taking a quick detour to play Judgment, it's time to play the series proper. Yakuza Kiwami and Yakuza Kiwami 2, released outside of Japan in 2017 and 2018, respectively, aren't the best Yakuza games overall, but they are the best ways to experience Yakuza and Yakuza 2. 

Kiwami and Kiwami 2 are both remakes, and they do a good job bringing the original two games in the series, which were originally PlayStation 2 exclusives, closer to modern standards. Kiwami 2 especially excels in this regard, since it was made in the aforementioned Dragon Engine and has all the same bells and whistles of Yakuza 6. Kiwami 1 originally launched on the PlayStation 3, so it's still an update of a last-gen game. 

Gameplay-wise, the two Kiwami games are more of that great Yakuza “run and around and beat the crap out of dudes” you've come to expect if you've made it this far. But especially compared to the highs of Yakuza 0 and Yakuza 6, the stories of these games, even with rewrites and changes made for the remakes, just never hit the same marks. They still feel hokey and rushed the way older game stories can as they try and tell an in-depth story under the confines of limited space. Considering Yakuza 0 is a prequel and Yakuza 6 has that story primer for new players, I still contend they're the best two games to play if you're new to the Yakuza series. But if you made it this far, Kiwami and Kiwami 2 are a great look at where the series came from. 

Probably not. Which is unfortunate! In 2007, legendary director Takashi Miike (Audition, Ichi The Killer) loosely adapted the first Yakuza game into a live-action film called Like a Dragon. It features some pretty great talent, such as Show Aikawa (the Dead or Alive film series, Yakuza 5) and Tomorowo Taguchi (Ley Lines, Shinjuku Triad Society) and has some fun nods to the original game, but unfortunately, it's just not very good. It's hard to condense a 15-20 hour game into an hour and 50 minute movie, and Like a Dragon definitely suffers from trying to do too much with its limited runtime. 

Instead, you should watch the other yakuza films by Takashi Miike, which are often fantastic. I recommended Dead or Alive, Dead or Alive 2: Birds, Ichi the Killer, Rainy Dog, and Ley Lines. They're great!

A new Yakuza film adaptation was recently announced by Sega. Check out our dream cast. 

The Yakuza Remastered Collection

Lastly, if you want to play Yakuza 3, Yakuza 4, and Yakuza 5, The Yakuza Remastered Collection released in February 2020 is the way to go. There's no new bells and whistles here like with the Kiwami games; these are just remastered ports of the PlayStation 3 games – a decision series producer Daisuke Sato told us came down to time – but the new physical release is currently the easiest and cheapest way to play these three games.

Are you planning to jump into the Yakuza series before Yakuza 7 is released on November 10? Let us know in the comments below!