For its 23 years of existence, Sega’s game series, Shenmue , has arguably experienced a lot of drama. The series began life with a record-breaking budget and industry-changing aspirations, only to founder as a casualty of its original target platform, the short-lived Dreamcast. While the collection returned as a surprising, Sony-promoted Kickstarter in 2015 , the resulting Shenmue III underwhelmed (and left some backers livid thanks to an EGS-related switcheroo ).
Yet the series’ first two games , in spite associated with their dated mechanics, remain beloved for players who reveled within Shenmue ‘s mix of substantial martial arts combat, open-city exploration, and fully voiced dialogue. (The 1999 original’s best ideas are better realized in the likes of Grand Theft Auto and Sega’s own Yakuza . ) Furthermore, Shenmue games always came with an intriguing, detective-like story of family, friendship, and revenge. Forget the particular game industry drama. Ryo’s suspenseful search for his father’s killer, Lan Di, was the good stuff, and dedicated fans continue to hope its story might even see a logical conclusion.
I kept all regarding that in mind while tuning in to this week’s Shenmue: The Animation , a new TV series co-produced by Adult Swim and Crunchyroll, in hopes that its season premiere might benefit from leaving its video game roots behind. And now I’m the bit upset—enough to beg Sega: please don’t get fans’ hopes up with an animated sequence premiere this good, simply to yank Shenmue away from us again.