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Ghostwire: Tokyo is a bit of an oddity.
It spent a year as a PlayStation console exclusive, despite being owned by Xbox.

This looks cool, but it’s just one of many simple tasks to do across Shibuya.
It’s an open-world action-adventure game exploring the Japanese supernatural and paranormal mythology.
It was the first game fromTango Gameworksthat didn’t fall under the horror genre.
Unfortunately, the game’s biggest weaknesses are outside of its thriller atmosphere.

This looks cool, but it’s just one of many simple tasks to do across Shibuya.
Without filters, the map is essentially unreadable because of all the icons scattered everywhere.
It’s unfortunate when the setting and world building is genuinely top-notch.
The story explores Japanese mythology behind the supernatural and paranormal, including spirits, magic, and curses.

So much city to explore, and so much of it is the same as any other part.
Sadly, Ghostwire: Tokyo’s gameplay often detracts from that setting and atmosphere.
This is an action-adventure game with atonof combat, and at surface level that combat is extremely interesting.
As you play, you unlock new abilities for combat, traversal, and survival.

This game absolutely knows how to use horror to its advantage, it just opts not to most of the time.
I wasn’t alone in this thinking, either.
you might read ourGhostwire: Tokyo Xbox reviewfrom Jez Corden for more in-depth analysis.
you might also find it on PlayStation, Steam,Xbox and PC Game Pass, andXbox Cloud Gaming.

Moments when you’re pulled out of Shibuya are some of the best in the game.

I’d love to see a sequel for Ghostwire: Tokyo move in a more terrifying direction.

























