God Hand | -japan-

Today, a used, black-label copy of God Hand -Japan- sells for over ¥15,000 ($100 USD) on Akihabara shelves. It is a time capsule of an era when "hardcore" meant pattern recognition and finger dexterity, not grinding for loot boxes. God Hand has never been remastered. It has never received a sequel. Yet, its DNA runs through modern hits like Sifu (evasion mechanics) and Hi-Fi Rush (rhythm-based taunting). Shinji Mikami has stated he would like to direct a sequel, but only if he can "make it weirder."

Clover Studio was shut down shortly after God Hand ’s release. Producer Atsushi Inaba later said, "We made games we wanted to play. That is no longer a viable business model." God Hand -Japan-

In the sprawling history of Japanese video games, some titles are remembered for their sales, others for their stories, and a rare few for their sheer, unapologetic audacity. God Hand (2006) belongs to the latter category. Developed by Clover Studio (the now-legendary Osaka-based team behind Viewtiful Joe and Okami ) and directed by the eccentric genius Shinji Mikami ( Resident Evil ), God Hand was a commercial failure. But in Japan—and among a devout global cult—it is revered as the ultimate expression of "Baka Sakasama" (idiotic inversion). The year is 200X. You play Gene , a snarky, martial-arts drifter who wanders into a small European village. After a demon attack, he loses both his arms. A mysterious woman named Olivia saves his life by grafting ancient, mythical "God Hands" onto his stumps. Today, a used, black-label copy of God Hand

The premise? Stop the demon king, Angra. The execution? You punch a clown, suplex a zombie, and kick a chihuahua so hard it flies into the stratosphere. It has never received a sequel

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