2025 Was The Best Year For Ninja Games Ever, But All Of Them Just...

2025 Was The Best Year For Ninja Games Ever, But All Of Them Just...

This year's Ninja Gaiden 2 Black finally does right by a messy but one-of-a-kind action game.

In addition to our main Game of the Year Awards 2025, each member of the PC Gamer team is shining a spotlight on a game they loved this year. We'll post new personal picks each day throughout the rest of the month. You can find them all here.

We try pretty hard to avoid lazily dropping cliches into our writing here at PC Gamer, which puts me in an awkward position as I sit down to pitch to you why a remaster, Ninja Gaiden 2 Black, is one of the best games of 2025, despite mostly being a fresh Unreal Engine 5 skin for a game that came out in 2008. So if I must sin, I may as well see just how many forbidden phrases from the style guide I can use at once.

2025's brand new Ninja Gaiden 4, despite being a visceral action romp with more bloody decapitations than you can shake a stick at, is ultimately a bit of a mixed bag. At its core is a pulse-pounding combat system that echoes the greats of yesteryear, but it's rough around the edges. Fans of the genre will still find a lot to like, but at the end of the day it's not without flaws. If you turn off your brain you'll get a kick out of PlatinumGames' no-holds-barred attempt to make Ninja Gaiden combat on crack, but it never lives up to the heights of the esteemed franchise.

In other words: They really don't make 'em like they used to.

Sorry. Sorry!! That must've been pretty gross to read. If you threw up, that's on me. I thought about jamming a "It's the Dark Souls of…" line in there somehow, but was worried the paragraph may actually become so cursed it could be summoned to life as if through some necromantic power.

I just needed you to know that I know how ridiculous it is to bust out "they don't make 'em like they used to" against Ninja Gaiden 4, a game in a genre that's starved for new additions and by its very nature feels like it belongs more to the 2000s than the 2020s. And the 2D platformer Ninja Gaiden: Ragebound and Sega's beautiful Shinobi metroidvania-lite are both kinda catching strays here, because they're good, and we couldn't have had the year of the ninja without them.

It's just that when it comes to slicing a thousand dudes into bloody ribbons while riding a wave of pure adrenaline, nothing does it like Ninja Gaiden 2 Black.

To me, the 2008 NG2 is simply the best character action game ever made, trading away the 2004 Ninja Gaiden's more measured defense and level exploration for linear stages o

Source: PC Gamer