Stranger Than Heaven Is A Yakuza Prequel With A Star-Studded Cast

Stranger than Heaven has been garnering plenty of interest since its debut at 2024's The Game Awards as Project Century. While other short teaser trailers have been shown since, today we got our first look at the broader game in the Xbox Presents: A Special Look at Stranger than Heaven presentation. We now have a more concrete look at what Stranger than Heaven is, how it plays, what sort of story it tells, and how it potentially leads into the greater Yakuza/Like A Dragon series.

That last bit's not really a spoiler, either, considering that Yakuza's Tojo Clan is mentioned in the very first scene we saw.

Stranger than Heaven follows the life of Makoto Daito (voiced and modeled after actor Yu Shirota), a youth born to an American father and a Japanese mother. When his father passes away, he finds himself an outcast in early-1915 America. Makoto stows away aboard a vessel in a San Francisco harbor bound for Japan, where he believes he may be able to be accepted--beginning a saga that spans 50 years and five distinct periods in Japan's history.


The presentation introduced us to a variety of characters, including Orpheus (Snoop Dogg), a smuggler doing dirty business on the high seas who takes Makoto under his wing; Yu Shinjo (Dean Fujioka), Makoto's dear friend and rival; Takashi (Satoshi Fujihara), a young yakuza member who looks up to Makoto, and Suzy (Tori Kelly), a singer from overseas looking to become big in Japan. Other actors announced to make in-game appearances during the presentation include Moeka Hoshi, Cordell Broadus, Akio Otsuka, Ado, and the likeness of Bunta Sugawara, though detailed information on their roles is not yet revealed.

The game's story begins in 1915 and concludes in 1965. The action and story occur in five distinct cities and time periods: the port city of Kokura in 1915, Yakuza-controlled Kure in 1929, wartime organized crime-infested Osaka in 1943, post-war Atami in 1951, and finally the familiar ground of Kamurocho, Shinjuku in 1965. The presence of a seedy underworld and organized crime weighs heavy across all the periods, and Makoto often sees himself tied up with unsavory characters over the course of his life. Both the overall look and feel of the cities and the activities available to players vary based on location and time period, giving players a real sense of the rapid changes Japan was experiencing. The presentation shows snippets of various quests and minigames, ranging from arm-wrestling matches, to gambling, to managing a music venue.

With some big-name musical celebrities among the cast, it's no surprise that music plays a big part in Stranger than Heaven. Makoto has a natural talent for many things music-related, eventually becoming a producer, promoter, and manager. He can find musical inspiration in many things around him, collecting sounds in his memory and using them to create new compositions with collaborators. He also directs and promotes music acts through an agency, and he'll be able to recruit band members in quests and minigames.

Of course, the world of entertainment is known to have a dark side, and Makoto will be facing that head-on. The combat system is different from anything RGG Studio has done before, with the shoulder and trigger buttons controlling the left and right sides of Makoto's body independently. Buttons can be held to charge attacks, allowing players to do things like charge up one limb for a powerful strike while attacking rapidly with another. Weapons like blades and hammers can also be picked up, bought, or crafted to get an edge during fights.

Stranger than Heaven is set to release sometime this winter, and will be available on Xbox Game Pass at launch. While there's still plenty of information being kept under wraps--like just how exactly everything that happens ties into the Tojo Clan that Yakuza fans know and love--the game is certainly shaping up to be a unique open-world adventure with a lot of interesting ideas.

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