Onimusha: Warlords
70 /100
Based on 14 reviews

Onimusha: Warlords Reviews

Check out Onimusha: Warlords Review Scores from trusted Critics below. With 14 reviews on CriticDB, Onimusha: Warlords has a score of:

70

Game Page
4.5/10

You’ll be left out with a “meh” after finishing the game. What game did we just play?

Read Full Review
7/10

Still a great game after all these years. Featuring improved controls with almost none of the visual upgrades.

Read Full Review
IGN
January 16, 2019
6.5/10

I definitely had fun with Onimusha: Warlords, despite many of its mechanics and visuals aging poorly since 2001. A lot of my enjoyment comes from revisiting an old favorite, but there's not enough new stuff here to recommend this to someone new to the series. The save system, terrible animations, and unskippable cutscenes just don't work in the modern era. It's a shame, because Onimusha is one of my favorite PS2 games, and just a few tweaks to some of the older systems would have helped enormously. The modern release is exactly how I remember it, and unfortunately in 2019...

Read Full Review
PC Gamer
January 15, 2019
68/100

Capcom's old hack-and-slash series is starting to feel its age.

Read Full Review
COGConnected
January 15, 2019
80/100

Almost 18 years since its first release, Onimusha: Warlords has been remastered for current generation consoles in a mostly surprising move by Capcom. Originally developed based on the concept of Resident Evil, but in a ninja setting, Onimusha: Warlords holds up very well. While I’ve never experienced the title in its original form, its graphics at the very least appear to be quite similar to its original release. Despite this, Onimusha: Warlords holds up competently as a fun, classic-feeling title.

Read Full Review
Push Square
January 15, 2019
7/10

Whenever someone raises the question of which dormant game franchises need to be resurrected from the dead, it’s never too long before Capcom’s PlayStation 2-centric Onimusha series comes back as an answer. The tales of a Japan overrun by the supernatural failed to put in an appearance anywhere outside of the sixth generation of consoles, making it 13 years since we last heard word of any Genma soul consumption. That all changes though with the remaster of Onimusha: Warlords, a re-release of the franchise’s 2001 origin that brings with it improved visuals, updated controls, and new features. Is this enough...

Read Full Review
NaN%

Those who enjoyed the original release of Onimusha: Warlords way back when will enjoy their time with this remaster. Even if you're a newcomer to the series, fans of action RPGs will appreciate its design.

Read Full Review
GamingTrend
January 15, 2019
70/100

A short but sweet gem of a game dusted off and polished by Capcom for a quick nostalgia trip. Visual and auditory upgrades make this the definitive version of Onimusha: Warlords, but nothing can hide the game’s aging design.

Read Full Review
7.5/10

Back in 2001, Capcom debuted a samurai themed action game that borrowed heavily from their Resident Evil franchise. It was a delightful change of pace that gamers loved and now; you can relive the magic with this new release of Onimusha: Warlords.

Read Full Review
WayTooManyGames
January 15, 2019
8/10

Onimusha must be one of the most criminally underrated gaming franchises of all time. Capcom’s attempt at mixing the survival horror camera angles and difficulty from Resident Evil with hack and slash elements that would later on become more notable in games like Devil May Cry was bold back in 2001, and while it managed to sell relatively well and spawn a handful of sequels, we haven’t heard anything new from it for more than a decade.

Read Full Review
65/100

Still thoroughly good fun, Onimusha: Warlords is nonetheless showing its age, and unfortunately doesn't really hold up in 2019. For a fan like me, revisiting Capcom's samurai survival horror is genuinely welcome, but anyone experiencing it for the first time might come away perplexed.

Read Full Review
8.4/10

While die-hard Resident Evil fans will be turned off by the game's length, others will find it to be the survival-horror game for people who don't like survival-horror games.

Read Full Review
Eurogamer
July 17, 2001
8/10

Despite its movie-like production values and incredible opening, Onimusha leaves its audience guessing at the end, and given that it's only 10 hours long (less if you gun through it quickly), it's almost disappointing. I certainly wanted more, but then I completed it in just two sittings. The problem is, once you know the ins and outs there isn't much replay value. It's true, hacking people to bits with swords doesn't grow old, and you can be quite creative with Onimusha, but really you're looking at 10 hours or so of gaping awe, followed by twenty minutes or so of...

Read Full Review