"We are middle-aged guys ourselves… so I guess that's the kind of target audience we're going for, probably."
"I think that this is precisely one of Like a Dragon's selling points. In Yakuza: Like a Dragon, everything starts with three unemployed middle-aged guys being like "Let's go to Hello Work." They have a different air about them than a group of young heroes would, complaining about back pain and the like. But this "humanity" you feel from their age is what gives the game originality."
The two creators compare the feeling of playing Yakuza games to "chilling out with older guys in a bar," as opposed to "going on an exhausting drinking party with young people."
heck yeah boomers making boomer games
they should add a grilling mini game to the next one
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I still have like 8 of these to play (I bought them all and work through them in cold months) and I would be surprised if there isn't a ridiculously involved side-game where Kiryu operates a food truck empire already
Anyway Yakuza is hands down the best IP out there and I have nothing but good things to say about it
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no food truck, but in Like a Dragon's longass management activity is a gigacorp that starts as a sweets store, and in 5 & ishin there are restaurant minigames.
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I refuse to believe such a thing exists where you live.
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They need a fishing minigame if they don't already have one (and if they do, make it better)
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They actually do lol
I'm pretty sure they even have some Sega arcade machines in some of them where you can play old fishing arcade games too
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