The action keeps its signature extravagance: sumptuous combos, Demon Slave summoning giant monsters and gleefully deranged staging. The pacing sometimes scatters and the story loses the plot, but the raw thrill of combat stays at the top of the genre.
Your verdict
Category
Action1 player16+
Description
Bayonetta travels between worlds to stop their destruction, aided by the young Viola. Published by Nintendo, released worldwide in 2022. Giant demons to summon and steer, ever more extravagant action, varied stages and spectacular battles.
Bayonetta 3 review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
3/5
Story
★★★★★
"Solid"
The excess scales up another notch: titanic kaiju, riots of colour and combat choreography of hallucinatory fluidity. Beneath the apparent chaos, readability stays impeccable, stamping a baroque staging few action games dare to match.
As eccentric as ever, the witch's sonic world blends hyperactive pop with orchestral jazz, anchored by its now-signature approach: a delirious reworking of nursery-rhyme tunes over a wall of brass. The music hugs the demented choreography of combat, underlining every combo with theatrical emphasis. That unabashed madness, glamorous and gaudy, is inseparable from Bayonetta's whole attitude.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
The raw thrill lies in lavish combos and Witch Time's timing: dodging at the last instant to cleave a foe still feels top-tier among beat-'em-ups. Demon Slave, letting you steer giant monsters, delivers colossal clashes at the cost of some readability. The variety borders on excess and the Switch strains on framerate, but for outsized, stylish action the craft remains total.
Combat erupts into stylish excess as Bayonetta summons colossal demons to topple equally titanic foes. Witch Time dodges, Demon Slave and virtuoso chains drive a dizzying rhythm. Every boss escalates scale and transformation in over-the-top staging, fusing outrageous spectacle with the demanding precision of Stylish Action.
A questionable morality
An elegant witch pulverizing swarms of celestial angels with a generous helping of suggestive poses: laid out plainly, the picture is faintly startling. Mid-game, though, we soak up every ecstatic combo as pure stylish obviousness, never pausing to wonder whether Paradise's creatures deserved this. The clash between the displayed grace and the gleeful carnage is the whole charm.
Is Bayonetta 3 still worth playing in 2026?
Bayonetta 3 pushes the series' escalation to a deliberate vanishing point. The giant demon summons you steer directly turn some clashes into colossal spectacles, sometimes at the expense of the readability dear to beat-em-up purists. The action stays wildly virtuosic when it refocuses on Bayonetta herself. The variety of levels and situations borders on overload. On Switch, framerate drops betray the machine's limits. But for fans of oversized, stylish action, it is a generous conclusion that fully embraces its madness and rewards mastery.