
Multiplayer returns, so co-op's also on the cards should you need some help. The end result is something that feels surprisingly novel. It's not quite a musou - that brand of crowd-clearing action that Koei Tecmo has made a craft of over the past 20 years - but it weaves in some ideas with its morale system that sees you conquering the map to earn more power.

Wo Long, on the other hand, flows like water and invites you to lose yourself in its combat, pulling you through its stages with a momentum quite unlike that which you'd associate with your typical Soulslike. Nioh was a game of studied composure, and one that rewarded consideration in your attacks. It's more than that, though, with an all-new approach to combat and an entirely different feel to it all. Because, in the simplest terms possible, Wo Long is Nioh transposed to the mythology and legends of third century China. There's plenty that's familiar in Wo Long, though, both from the Nioh games it builds upon - themselves a pair of hard-edged, deeply enjoyable spins on the action RPG template laid out by FromSoft's Souls games - and Koei Tecmo's broader history with the Three Kingdoms periods. Availability: Out 2023 on PC, PS5, PS4, Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S.

And all this before I've even had the chance to finish the team's take on Final Fantasy, Strangers of Paradise, or even managed to fully get my head around what exactly Wo Long: Fallen Dynasty is. No sooner had I wrapped up an evening with the demo of Wo Long: Fallen Dynasty - a demo that's just gone live to all on PlayStation 5 - than the news broke of another in its long line of action games with Rise of the Ronin. There's prolific, and then there's Team Ninja.
