The monumental, moving second Shenmue chapter taking Ryo's journey to Hong Kong and beyond. Sublime art direction, mature writing and snappy combat. An absolute peak of video gaming.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player12+
Description
Ryo Hazuki continues his revenge quest in Hong Kong and Kowloon in this second Sega masterpiece. Published by Sega, released in Europe in April 2002. Action-adventure with simulated Hong Kong street life, retro arcade games, enriched martial arts, epic narration continuing from Shenmue. European version.
Shenmue II review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
From the teeming alleys of Hong Kong to the dizzying towers of Kowloon, the city sprawls into a maze of astonishing density. Light, crowds and architecture compose a constant disorientation, carried by a rare realism. This urban immersion, vast and alive, remains a peak of atmosphere on the console.
Vaster still, the music accompanies Ryo's journey through Hong Kong with orchestral flights and spellbinding Chinese sonorities. Between contemplation and grandeur, each theme underlines the disorientation and the maturity of the story. This symphonic richness, broad and inhabited, magnificently extends the magic of the first part.
Pressing his quest for vengeance into the teeming alleys of Hong Kong and Kowloon, Ryo watches his journey widen into a genuine tale of apprenticeship and destiny. Encounters, masters and long silences nourish a contemplative, almost initiatory writing. This vast, inhabited sequel keeps an aura that remains intact.
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"Mild"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Plunged into a teeming metropolis, you string together tailings, odd jobs and arcade sessions while following the thread of a patient revenge that gradually grabs you. Every alley explored, every move learned rewards curiosity and revives the urge to push the adventure further. Its deliberate slowness still disorients, but the scale of its living world exerts a tenacious pull.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Wandering the living streets of Hong Kong and Kowloon plunges you into an adventure of rare density, between investigation, martial arts, odd jobs and retro arcade games. Ryo's quest for revenge stretches across several discs, punctuated by a simulated daily life that invites you to linger. That narrative ambition and wealth of detail explain its enduring status as a masterpiece of the console.
Shenmue II PAL is the European edition of AM2's sequel, one of the last major Dreamcast titles in Europe. Collector value comes from the game never being officially released on US Dreamcast (Microsoft having bought the Xbox exclusivity), making the PAL version the only Western Dreamcast disc release of the sequel. Major historical piece.
A cult cover
Hong Kong's night-blue and neon wrap a more mature Ryo, swept into a sprawling city. The vertical composition and urban depth convey the adventure's new scale. Denser and more ambitious than the first chapter, it makes you want to get lost in its back alleys.
Is Shenmue II still worth playing in 2026?
A direct and more open sequel, Shenmue II moves Ryo to Hong Kong and then Kowloon, offering wider urban environments and a brisker narrative. Mini games, training sessions and memorable encounters abound, and the staging reaches an emotional peak in the closing hours. Far more accessible than the first entry, this episode keeps the Yu Suzuki touch while improving day to day comfort. A strong recommendation for anyone wishing to understand the heritage of the modern adventure game on a console.