Rating
My Hero Academia: All's Justice
SMASH through My Hero Academia’s final story arc and triumph over your foes in spectacular 3v3 battles! Follow the trials of Deku and other characters in the Final War between Heroes and Villains!
Release Date
Developer
Publisher
Playing Now
Steam Reviews
Player Rating (IGDB)
Watching on Twitch
Similar Games
My Hero Academia: All's Justice Reviews
Professional reviews from gaming critics
My Hero Academia: All's Justice is the perfect way to say goodbye to an anime titan, with so much content and flashy as hell combat.
My Hero Academia: All's Justice truly is a treat for fans of the franchise, offering multiple substantial game modes and a huge roster of playable heroes and villains. It's not all that welcoming to newcomers, however, and its Team Up Mission mode isn't always all that exciting to play through.
We have a brand new anime fighting game and you know how much I love those so let's put 'em up in MY HERO ACADEMIA: All's Justice.
I have mixed feelings about My Hero Academia: All’s Justice. At its core, it has a good 3D arena fighter battle system. Its best feature is its massive dream roster of My Hero Academia characters that all feel unique from one another. But almost every bonus mode and feature feels cheap and undercooked. Everything except the combat seems like an afterthought. But if all you’re looking for is versus battles with tons of My Hero Academia characters, then My Hero Academia: All’s Justice is a dream come true.
The Final War arc of My Hero Academia was one of the anime’s most anticipated storylines, bringing together heroes and villains in an explosive clash that tested everyone’s limits. MY HERO ACADEMIA: All’s Justice aims to capture that intensity in a 3v3 3D arena fighting game, offering fans a chance to step into the boots of their favorite characters during the series’ climactic moments. While the game succeeds in delivering engaging combat and a robust roster, it struggles with some t...
My Hero Academia: All’s Justice has some ambitious ideas for an arena fighter, though they’re executed with mixed results. As a My Hero Academia 3D fighting game, All’s Justice is rather enjoyable and features an impressive roster – it’s just the singleplayer campaigns that struggle more, thanks to some peculiar design choices.
All’s Justice is a big improvement over the previous games, but frustrating difficulty spikes stop it from reaching its full potential.
MY HERO ACADEMIA: All’s Justice took on an ambitious task to make a semi-open world experience fun, but felt strapped by budgetary or technical constraints.
My Hero Academia: All's Justice is, at times, Byking's best entry in the series, taking some ambitious swings that don't always hit. The story mode, while frustrating at times, is servicable, and there are a few modes worth checking out. Unfortunately, limitations with the Rising system, a lack of stages, and the clunkiness of Team-Up Mission can leave you with a sour taste. All's Justice is a fun time for existing fans, but it makes no sense for a newcomer to start here.
It has been 6 years since we got My Hero’s Justice 2. My Hero’s Justice is the second arena fighter for the MY HERO ACADEMIA series. I got the chance to play a little bit of the My Hero Academia: All’s Justice video game at Pax West 2025. I have now gotten a chance to play three dedicated hours of the game. I have been able to test a good chunk of the game modes.
My Hero Academia debuted in manga form back in 2014 before being turned into a very popular anime starting in 2016. Both continued to run over the last decade until the conclusion for both came over the last couple of years. In that time, the series has spawned a few different video games, including the One’s Justice series, which is also now reaching its climax with My Hero Academia: All’s Justice.