Onimusha 2: Samurais Destiny
This time, we aren’t playing as the stoic Samanosuke. We step into the role of (based on the real-life legendary swordsman). Jubei is rougher around the edges—a ronin whose village was destroyed by Nobunaga’s demonic forces. His motivation is pure revenge, but the journey twists that simple goal into something more complicated.
The star of the show is the (or “one-hit kill”) mechanic. Time a block or a dodge perfectly as an enemy strikes, and your sword lights up, allowing you to cut down lesser demons in a single, cinematic slash. Landing an Issen never gets old. Onimusha 2 Samurais Destiny
Capcom remastered the first Onimusha in 2019. Where is Samurai’s Destiny ? Fans have been begging for it. Rumors swirl, but nothing official yet. Until then, dust off your PS2 (or emulate it legally if you own the disc), because this samurai epic is too good to be trapped in the past. This time, we aren’t playing as the stoic Samanosuke
But the most unique feature? Throughout the game, you find trinkets, food, and oddities. You can give these to your allies (the ninja Kotaro, the mysterious Ekei, etc.). Depending on what you give them, your relationship changes, unlocking side-quests, different cutscenes, and even unique items. It’s bizarrely deep for a hack-and-slash action game. His motivation is pure revenge, but the journey
And honestly? That’s exactly what we need more of.
The plot is classic Capcom: Nobunaga Oda has made a pact with the Genma (demons) to conquer feudal Japan. Jubei must collect five hidden “Oath Medals” to form an alliance with other feudal lords. It’s cheesy, melodramatic, and absolutely perfect for a Saturday morning with a bowl of ramen.

