Arc System Works delivers a sumptuous 2D fighter whose stylized 3D mimics hand-drawn art flawlessly. The system is more approachable than past entries without sacrificing depth, and the rollback netcode is exemplary, even on Switch.
Your verdict
Category
Fighting2 players12+
Description
Sharply designed fighters clash in fast, spectacular duels. Published by Arc System Works, released worldwide in 2024. Roman Cancels to extend combos, smooth rollback netcode, anime-style staging and a rock soundtrack.
Guilty Gear Strive review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
2/5
Story
★★★★★
"Classic"
An Arc System Works feat: 3D shaded so perfectly you'd swear it was hand-drawn, frame by frame. Ink effects, cinematic slow-downs and iconic poses turn every K.O. into an animated manga panel, redefining the visual standard of the fighting genre.
Daisuke Ishiwatari pushes his vocal hard rock to glorious excess, turning every duel into an electric gig: screaming guitars, full-throated choruses, lyrics that comment on the fighters themselves. The music locks to the jittery tempo of the bouts and galvanizes the player's aggression. This marriage of metal and brawling, long the series' calling card, has never sounded this huge.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
You feel the difference the moment you grab the pad: every blow lands with weight, every throw cracks, and spacing matters as much as aggression. Strive's system favours readable exchanges where a smart read turns into big damage, while Roman Cancels preserve the depth. Rollback netcode keeps online matches remarkably smooth, even on Switch. That controlled intensity hasn't dimmed at all, and it remains a benchmark for modern versus fighting.
Facing a high-level opponent means entering a joust of reads where every character embodies a combat philosophy. Sol, Ramlethal and Happy Chaos impose their tools, pressure and mix-ups that the Roman Cancel turns into intense mind-game duels. Sumptuous 3D animation, crushing hard rock and the Wall Break system give every round an electrifying theatricality.
Better with friends
Guilty Gear Strive lives for the duel: two players, raw rivalry and flashy combos that turn every round into a style showcase. Competition reigns here, carried by spectacular presentation that makes comebacks electrifying. The skill ceiling is sky-high and gaps between players can widen, yet a hard-won victory always earns an immediate rematch, and then another after that.
Is Guilty Gear Strive still worth playing in 2026?
Guilty Gear Strive is arguably the best entry point the series has ever had, and it still delivers today. Arc System Works hits a visual peak, with 3D models that mimic anime to perfection and a thunderous presentation. The system stays deep thanks to Roman Cancels while reading far more clearly for newcomers. Above all, rollback netcode makes online play smooth, an essential condition for a modern fighter. The rock soundtrack rounds it off. For any fighting-game fan on Switch, it is a safe bet.