Sequel to the legendary Shenmue, Xbox exclusive in the West. Ryo Hazuki in Hong Kong then China, slow and contemplative narrative, unique living world. The Shenmue experience is unmatched for its density of details. For patient players seeking total immersion.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player12+
Description
Ryo Hazuki continues his quest for vengeance against Lan Di through the alleyways of Aberdeen in Hong Kong and then the pastoral landscapes of Guilin in China. Published by Sega and Microsoft, released in 2002 in the United States and Europe. Sequel to Shenmue featuring a rich open world, cinematic QTEs, in-depth kung-fu combat, hundreds of characters to meet, and a complete English dub exclusive to the Xbox 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
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Wandering the alleys of Aberdeen and then the landscapes of Guilin rewards taking your time, since every corner hides a character to question, a shop or a mini-game. Ryo's quest for revenge unfolds across a dense open world punctuated by cinematic QTEs and kung-fu combat to master. Revered for its scale and ahead-of-its-time realism, it remains a benchmark for the long, immersive adventure.
Shenmue II, the console version of the sequel to Sega and Yu Suzuki's ambitious epic, long the only Western release of the entry until very late, which made it a Grail for saga fans. Pressed in low volume, its desirability rests on this status as a Western exclusive of a revered entry and a real physical scarcity rather than mere availability. A flagship piece for a Sega set.
Is Shenmue II still worth playing in 2026?
Released on Xbox in 2002, Sega AM2's project remains one of the most ambitious adventures ever produced in Japan. Hong Kong and Kowloon reconstructed with an oversized sense of the everyday, the blend of investigation, quick time events and Virtua Fighter combat set a singular narration. The art direction and Yu Suzuki's music keep a rare emotional power. Combat handling stays stiff, the controls have aged and some dialogues stretch out. Recommended today for fans of authorial adventure and for Sega devotees curious about AM2's swan song on Microsoft's first console hardware globally.