Samurai Warriors 4 | |
Developer: | Omega Force |
Publisher: | Koei Tecmo |
Director: | Osamu Mieda |
Producer: | Hisashi Koinuma |
Designer: | Myamosu Iko |
Series: | Samurai Warriors |
Genre: | Hack-and-slash |
Modes: | Single-player, multiplayer |
is a 2014 hack and slash game by Koei Tecmo for PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, and PlayStation Vita, and the sequel to Samurai Warriors 3. Unlike past Samurai Warriors games, this one only has Japanese voice overs.
A revised version of the game titled was released the following year in 2015 for PlayStation 3, Playstation 4, Playstation Vita, and Windows via Steam. This version features Naomasa Ii as a playable character, an improved Story Mode which focuses on the various characters, Survival Mode, upgrade to action balance, cut-scenes and character development system.
An enhanced version of the games titled was released for Nintendo Switch and Playstation 4 in Japan in 2019, and for Windows (via Steam) worldwide with Japanese and English support in May 2024. This edition contains more than 150 previously released DLC from Samurai Warriors 4, including costumes, weapons, customization parts, scenarios, and background music.
A reboot of the series titled Samurai Warriors 5 was released in June and July of 2021 for Nintendo Switch, Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One.
The game was made to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the series. While the game was confirmed to be in development for the PlayStation 3 as early as 2012,[1] it was not until the SCEJA Press Conference in September 2013 that the game was officially announced, with a version for PlayStation Vita in addition to PlayStation 3, and was released on March 20, 2014, in Japan.[2] [3] [4] [5] The PlayStation 4 version port followed on September 4, 2014, and was later released for North America and Europe in October.
A revised version, was released in 2015 on February 11 in Japan, in North America on September 29, and in Europe on October 2, but it does not contain the original stories from Samurai Warriors 4. A second expansion, was released in Japan on September 17, 2015, and in North America and Europe in 2016.
The game features character-switching, similar to the spin-off, , with which players can take two characters into battles simultaneously, and freely switch between the two.
Two new moves, "Hyper Attacks" and "Rage Mode" are featured in this game:
Duels are featured, which occur when player-controlled characters meet with enemy officers under specific conditions. The create-a-warrior mode is retained; it features much more expansive content, including the addition of two weapon movesets from the male and female protagonists from in addition to the three from previous games. Custom characters can also be played in the new "Chronicle Mode", where players can take requests for their custom generals. There is also an option that allows players to turn off female characters.[6]
Story Mode is also revamped; it no longer uses the traditional story-per-character format from previous games and instead features ten stories based on clans and regions during the Sengoku period, akin to the kingdom-based story mode implemented in the recent Dynasty Warriors games.
Each stage offers a selection of playable characters for the player to use according to their participation in the battles; consequently, some characters do not appear in the story, although they still appear in the aforementioned Chronicle Mode. All of the stories lead to two separate stories: the "Unification", which mainly tells the conquest of Japan by Hideyoshi Toyotomi as well as the conflicts between the Eastern and Western armies after Hideyoshi's death that leads to the Battle of Sekigahara and the rise of the Tokugawa shogunate; and the "Sanada" story, a parallel story with Unification that focuses on the Sanada clan.
Musou Attacks now have new finishing animations separate from their True Musou, but they no longer allow free-action for their durations. Enemy generals still use the older shockwave finishers, and are no longer fully invincible for their durations (they instead are granted Hyper Armor).
Like previous games in the series, the setting and story of Samurai Warriors 4 are centered on the Sengoku period of Japan, a period of much military conflict and political warfare in which Japan was divided between regions ruled by daimyō that lasted from the middle of the 16th century to the early 17th century. The events depicted, however, are romanticized, and may or may not be factual; for example, Nobuyuki Sanada and his brother, Yukimura Sanada, are shown to participate in the battle of Kawanakajima, even though both of them had not yet been born at that time. Many figures with little relevancy to the period, particularly women who for the most part stayed out of battles, have larger roles; Koshōshō, notable for being Motochika Chōsokabe's wife in real life, becomes his primary rival in his conquest of Shikoku and is the representative of the Miyoshi clan in-game. Unlike the previous games, there are no hypothetical routes; as a result, the fates of the characters are played out as history stated.
The earliest battle depicted in the game is the battle of Itsukushima, fought between the Mōri clan and the Ōuchi clan in 1555, with the siege of Osaka, fought between the Tokugawa clan and the Toyotomi clan in 1614-1615, as the closing battle of the game.
The original game features a total of 55 characters. Virtually all characters from previous games return, including three characters (Goemon Ishikawa, Kojirō Sasaki, and Musashi Miyamoto) that were cut from the main series in Samurai Warriors 3 (in Samurai Warriors 2 for Goemon). Three characters: Munenori Yagyū, Naotora Ii, and Takatora Tōdō also make their debut in the main series here after having been introduced in the spin-off Sengoku Musou: Chronicle 2; they are counted as new characters in promotional materials.
In addition to returning characters, the game also introduces nine new characters, some of whom are former generic non-playable officers. Other than full playable characters, several generic officers can be made pseudo-playable by recruiting them as partners in Chronicle Mode.
The II update adds Naomasa Ii to the roster, bringing the character count to 56.
Bold denotes characters who are available by default
The game has received positive reviews, at the time becoming the highest rated entry in the series (until the release of Samurai Warriors 5 in 2021), with Famitsu giving a score of 34 out of 40 in both PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita versions. During the first week of release in Japan, the PS3 version of the game sold 120,452 physical retail copies, ranking second place amongst all Japanese software sales within that week, whilst the PS Vita version sold 39,597 physical retail copies.[7] The PS4 version, meanwhile sold 11,757 physical retail copies during its first week of release in Japan.[8]
Samurai Warriors 4-II has received average reception, scoring 73 out of 100 for the PlayStation 4 version on Metacritic. During the debut week of the release in Japan, the updated version of the original games has sold 44,574 units on PS3,[9] 23,519 units on PS Vita[9] and 22,468 units on PS4.[9]
The game's cast of characters and visuals are used in Sengoku Musou Shoot (戦国無双 シュート, Sengoku Musō Shūto), a social spin-off game released on April 22, 2014 for the mobile phones also to commemorate the series' 10th anniversary. Koei Tecmo collaborated with the Japanese Racing Association (JRA) to release on May 25, 2014 for the PC. Derby Musō reuses assets from Samurai Warriors 4 to create a horse racing game, like that of the Winning Post series, with famous Japanese racehorses. Eight characters from Samurai Warriors 4 make up the playable cast, plus Matthew C. Perry (known in-game as just Perry).
The game received a revision, titled, which was released in 2015 for Japan on February 11, in North America on September 29, and in Europe on October 2. It is described as neither a continuation nor an Xtreme Legends expansion like previous games; instead, it provides a "different" focus of the same game. Players choose a character as their protagonist for a selected scenario, which has a different progression depending on the character selected. Dream Castle Mode, first introduced in Samurai Warriors: Chronicles 3 is also present in the game. The game adds one new character, Naomasa Ii, to the character roster. A second expansion, was released in Japan on September 17, 2015, for the PS3, PS4, and PS Vita, with a release in North America and Europe in 2016. The gameplay focuses more on strategy as in other Empires expansions, with players issuing commands and taking suggestions to and from their subordinate military officers. A new "Resident Domestic Administration" was added. Featuring more than 100 generic officers, including female officers, it incorporates the marriage system for the first time, which sister series Dynasty Warriors had also implemented in their Empires expansions. The game does not add a new character, but in return, many more new events, such as interactions between characters, were added. The game is also supported by DLC costumes for all characters (in the original game, the focus of DLC costumes is only on the female characters).
was released in March 2019 in Japan for the PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch. It includes over 150 DLC previously released for the game, including costumes, weapons, customization parts, and others. A "15th Anniversary" edition is also available, which includes an art book, a soundtrack and music video set, and a postcard set. The game was released worldwide with additional English support on PC Steam.
An animated TV special titled aired on March 21, 2014, as part of the series' 10th anniversary, directed by Kōjin Ochi and animated by TYO Animations with screenplay provided by Yuka Yamada.[10] It features the original cast from the game series. It is based on an early battle in the game, namely, the siege of Ueda castle between the Sanada clan and the Tokugawa clan, featuring Yukimura Sanada and Nobuyuki Sanada as the main characters, and Tadakatsu Honda, Mitsunari Ishida, Kanetsugu Naoe, Kunoichi, Ina, and Ieyasu Tokugawa in supporting roles. The ending of the special, which features cameos by Kagekatsu Uesugi and Nobunaga Oda, teases a full anime adaptation, simply titled Samurai Warriors, again directed by Kojin Ochi and animated by TYO Animations, which aired between January 11 and March 29, 2015, for 12 episodes in total. It goes beyond the siege of Ueda castle and covers the entire timeline of the game starting from the siege of Odawara castle, and ending on the Osaka campaign, though it notably focuses on the Sanada clan. More characters are thus featured in the anime, including Hidetada Tokugawa and Hideyori Toyotomi, both of whom received new character designs since both have never been playable in any game of the series.