Compare Yakuza 5 Remastered Steam Key prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio. Published by SEGA. Released on 1/28/2021. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure.

Five playable characters, five cities, a taxi minigame, a pop-idol rhythm arc, and enough substories to swallow your week whole. Ambitious in every direction that counts.

I went into Yakuza 5 Remastered expecting more of what Yakuza 4 delivered, and instead found a game that treats "more" as a design philosophy rather than just a bullet point. Five protagonists, five distinct cities across Japan, and a content footprint so wide that the main story alone clocks in around 37 hours, with full completion pushing well past 100. That is not a number to take lightly, and it shapes everything about how this game lands depending on what kind of player you are. The five-character structure is the headline. Kiryu opens the game working as a taxi driver in Fukuoka, and his chapters include a surprisingly enjoyable driving and racing minigame layered on top of the series' usual brawler combat. Saejima takes things to the wilderness, with a hunting system in snowy Hokkaido that feels nothing like anything else in the series. Akiyama is the quickest and most satisfying fighter of the bunch, leaning on lightning kick combos. Newcomer Shinada is a former baseball player whose grappling and clinch-fighting style stands out mechanically, even if his chapter is the thinnest narratively. Then there is Haruka, Kiryu's adopted daughter, whose entire arc runs as a pop-idol rhythm game built around dance battles, song contests, and karaoke progression. It marks the first time a non-male lead is playable in the series, and while the rhythm gameplay will genuinely divide players, it is a bold swing. Each character also carries a unique Heat mechanic: Kiryu's Dragon Spirit makes him briefly invincible, Saejima's Tiger Puppetry turns crowd interaction into a power tool, and Shinada's Meteor Tackle sends enemies across the room with pro-wrestling force. The remaster side of things is functional rather than transformative. Running at 1080p and 60fps, it is a clean step up from the original PS3 release, and the overhauled English localization genuinely improves the emotional beats of the story. On PC specifically, arbitrary resolution support up to 8K is on the table, though the assets were never built for that. The main technical gripes players flag are the lack of high-refresh-rate support beyond 60fps, and some frame pacing roughness that may need a third-party fix for smoothest results. NPC behavior also carries over some of the engine jank from the original, with pathfinding oddities and occasional camera weirdness in dialogue sequences. None of it is game-breaking, but it is visible in a 2021 PC release. Where the game earns its reputation is in sheer breadth of content. Fishing, batting cages, snowball fights, karaoke, hunting, taxi racing, and substories that regularly go viral for being stranger than the main plot. The story itself is a mixed bag in a very Yakuza way: the individual character arcs deliver genuine emotional punches, particularly the Kiryu-Haruka thread, but the overarching plot loses focus in the final stretch and the pacing between chapters can feel uneven when you are ripped away from a story just as it gets moving. If you play Yakuza for the world-building, the side content, and the spectacle of its boss fights, this is close to the series' high-water mark. If tight, focused narrative is your priority, the seams show. Alex, Scout Team

Yakuza 5 Remastered Steam Key
ActionAdventure

Yakuza 5 Remastered Steam Key

Jan 28, 2021Ryu Ga Gotoku StudioSEGA
GamerScout Says

Five playable characters, five cities, a taxi minigame, a pop-idol rhythm arc, and enough substories to swallow your week whole. Ambitious in every direction that counts.

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About Yakuza 5 Remastered Steam Key

I went into Yakuza 5 Remastered expecting more of what Yakuza 4 delivered, and instead found a game that treats "more" as a design philosophy rather than just a bullet point. Five protagonists, five distinct cities across Japan, and a content footprint so wide that the main story alone clocks in around 37 hours, with full completion pushing well past 100. That is not a number to take lightly, and it shapes everything about how this game lands depending on what kind of player you are. The five-character structure is the headline. Kiryu opens the game working as a taxi driver in Fukuoka, and his chapters include a surprisingly enjoyable driving and racing minigame layered on top of the series' usual brawler combat. Saejima takes things to the wilderness, with a hunting system in snowy Hokkaido that feels nothing like anything else in the series. Akiyama is the quickest and most satisfying fighter of the bunch, leaning on lightning kick combos. Newcomer Shinada is a former baseball player whose grappling and clinch-fighting style stands out mechanically, even if his chapter is the thinnest narratively. Then there is Haruka, Kiryu's adopted daughter, whose entire arc runs as a pop-idol rhythm game built around dance battles, song contests, and karaoke progression. It marks the first time a non-male lead is playable in the series, and while the rhythm gameplay will genuinely divide players, it is a bold swing. Each character also carries a unique Heat mechanic: Kiryu's Dragon Spirit makes him briefly invincible, Saejima's Tiger Puppetry turns crowd interaction into a power tool, and Shinada's Meteor Tackle sends enemies across the room with pro-wrestling force. The remaster side of things is functional rather than transformative. Running at 1080p and 60fps, it is a clean step up from the original PS3 release, and the overhauled English localization genuinely improves the emotional beats of the story. On PC specifically, arbitrary resolution support up to 8K is on the table, though the assets were never built for that. The main technical gripes players flag are the lack of high-refresh-rate support beyond 60fps, and some frame pacing roughness that may need a third-party fix for smoothest results. NPC behavior also carries over some of the engine jank from the original, with pathfinding oddities and occasional camera weirdness in dialogue sequences. None of it is game-breaking, but it is visible in a 2021 PC release. Where the game earns its reputation is in sheer breadth of content. Fishing, batting cages, snowball fights, karaoke, hunting, taxi racing, and substories that regularly go viral for being stranger than the main plot. The story itself is a mixed bag in a very Yakuza way: the individual character arcs deliver genuine emotional punches, particularly the Kiryu-Haruka thread, but the overarching plot loses focus in the final stretch and the pacing between chapters can feel uneven when you are ripped away from a story just as it gets moving. If you play Yakuza for the world-building, the side content, and the spectacle of its boss fights, this is close to the series' high-water mark. If tight, focused narrative is your priority, the seams show. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamMulti-ProtagonistBeat-em-upRhythm MinigameOpen World JapanHeat ActionsSubstory-RichCrime DramaLong Playtime

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
89%(7,159)

Game Info

Developer
Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Jan 28, 2021

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