Compelling Story
Tons of Content
Realistic Japanese Setting
Yakuza 6 brings about a strong end to Kizama Kiryu's saga. Delivering a ton of content and satisfying story, anyone who's hopped onto the Yakuza train will want to see how it ends.
Top Critic Average
Critics Recommend
Compelling Story
Tons of Content
Realistic Japanese Setting
Yakuza 6 brings about a strong end to Kizama Kiryu's saga. Delivering a ton of content and satisfying story, anyone who's hopped onto the Yakuza train will want to see how it ends.
Take a Break with Yakuza 6: The Song of Life Mini-Games (PEGI)
Yakuza 6: The Song of Life | Previously on Yakuza…
Yakuza 6: The Song of Life - Previously on Yakuza… | PS4
The setting of Onomichi proves that the long-running series still has some tricks, making Yakuza 6 a worthy finale for its main protagonist.
Yakuza 6: The Song of Life presents the most detailed virtual chunk of Japan the series has managed to date, and its story provides a satisfying end to the Kizama Kiryu saga. However, as far as gameplay goes, Yakuza 6 doesn't make enough of an effort to break new ground, making it weaker overall than last year's Yakuza Zero.
Perhaps not the greatest Yakuza game, but Kazuma Kiryu's farewell certainly makes for the most human.
A touching finale for Kazuma Kiryu, Yakuza 6 manages to surprise and delight in equal measure.
Yakuza 6 delivers both quality and quantity, so saying goodbye to Kiryu doesn't feel rushed
Even with my criticisms of the admittedly optional and inconsequential aspects of the game, Yakuza 6 succeeds because its core story is so compelling.
Exciting changes to combat and an endearing narrative see the final chapter in Kazuma Kiryu's decade-long saga refine what has made the series great.
Aside from the most nitpicking of complaints, Yakuza 6 is but another declaration to the well-documented notion that Sega's decade-long series remains one of the finest, most consistent outings in the medium.