A revolutionary experience by Yu Suzuki that invents the interactive daily life in a living Japanese town. Tenderness, mystery, revenge: a founding masterpiece of the open world.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player12+
Description
Ryo Hazuki investigates his father's murder in 1980s Yokosuka in this Sega open world masterpiece. Published by Sega, released in Europe in January 2001. Action-adventure with simulated daily life, free dialogue, 1980s Japan atmosphere, cinematic revenge quest. European version.
Shenmue review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
The Yokosuka of the 1980s is resurrected with a dizzying care for detail: shopfronts, shifting weather, passersby going about their lives. This obsessive quest for realism, unheard of at the time, gives the world an almost tangible presence. This pioneering naturalism still fascinates through its atmosphere and hushed melancholy.
Blending cinematic orchestra, melancholy strings and traditional Japanese instruments, the score by Yuzo Koshiro and his team wraps Yokosuka in a poignant nostalgia. The music embraces the seasons and Ryo's solitary quest with rare elegance. This emotional breadth remains the soul of the adventure.
Haunted by his father's murder, a young man walks the Yokosuka of the 1980s in an investigation where every passerby and every shop seems to live its own life. The tale, slow and melancholy, blends revenge, grief and coming of age with rare precision. This pioneering narrative ambition still fascinates today.
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"Mild"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Running an investigation through a meticulously recreated daily life, questioning passersby and filling your evenings between the arcade and table soccer weaves an attachment to this world that makes you want to return each day. The clues advance in small steps and every day holds its surprise. The slow pace and the lulls put some off, but this simulated life keeps a rare power of immersion.
Shenmue PAL is the European edition of Yu Suzuki/AM2's masterpiece, one of the most ambitious projects on the whole console. Sega Europe print with the booklet and all four original discs required for a copy to count as complete. A major historical piece of Dreamcast collections.
A cult cover
Against a restrained background, Ryo Hazuki's determined face and the calligraphic seal impose a grave, almost cinematic mood from the outset. The composure of the layout and the wintry tones announce an intimate quest for revenge rather than a noisy action game. Elegant and serious, it promises a work apart.
Is Shenmue still worth playing in 2026?
Yu Suzuki's sprawling vision, Shenmue invents the FREE concept and imposes a simulation of Yokosuka 1986 of unprecedented density. Ryo Hazuki's quest moves slowly, punctuated by martial arts, mini games and surprising daily interactions. The deliberate pace may discourage players raised on modern games, but the staging ambition, attention to detail and unique atmosphere make this work a milestone that few later productions have dared to revisit. Rediscover it with patience and the rewards quickly stack up.