Yo-Kai Watch 2 on 3DS, enriched sequel with a journey to the past. More Yo-Kai, a deeper story and a Meiji-era Sakura town to explore. The Yo-Kai Watch saga increases in quality and ambition.
Your verdict
Category
RPG4 players7+
Co-op
Description
Nate and his Yo-Kai Jibanyan travel to the past to uncover Yo-Kai history and stop the Onimaro threat in the Korean Wonjo edition. Published by Nintendo, released in Korea in July 2015. Exclusive bonus Yo-Kai, time travel, hundreds of Yo-Kai to recruit, bonus modes. Korean edition.
Yogoe Watch 2 - Wonjo review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
3/5
Story
★★★★★
"Solid"
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Traveling back in time, widening the town and tracking down a myriad of new Yo-Kai to befriend reignites the medallium hunt on a grander scale, with more quests. Evolving your friends and combing every corner stretches out the adventure. The battle system stays loose on control, but this teeming collection and its endearing humor hold you in a stubborn grip.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Travelling back in time to uncover the Yokai's history unfolds an even broader collecting RPG, rich in creatures to recruit. The fleshed-out main quest, exploring new neighbourhoods and numerous challenges hold you for long hours. That generosity of content and humour, the series' own, offers a lifespan dear to fans.
Korean Wonjo version of Yo-Kai Watch 2, counterpart of the Bonga edition in the pairing distributed by Nintendo in Korea. Gathering both halves proves tricky in a local market with a thin, region-locked catalogue, each variant circulating independently. Its interest rests on this version complementarity and the rarity proper to the franchise's Korean 3DS editions.
Is Yogoe Watch 2 - Wonjo still worth playing in 2026?
Released in twin versions with exclusive Yokai, Yo-Kai Watch 2 fixes the first game's flaws with a wider map, time travel and noticeably richer content. The collecting, recruiting and wheel based battles gain variety, while the writing keeps its tender humour and its roots in Japanese folklore. This is the best entry point of the series, balanced and generous. For a fan of monster RPGs or someone curious about Yokai style worlds, the title keeps a solid, lasting appeal.