Yakuza: Dead Souls is goofy. Itâs silly. Itâs a parody. The game looks like it has borrowed pages from both the Left4Dead and Resident Evil handbooks. Yet wrapped inside that hammy exterior is something surprising: reality.
When the game was originally about to be released, the Tohoku Earthquake hit. Yakuza: Dead Souls, with its images of death and destruction, was pushed back out of respect to the victims. The Western release just hit this weekâtwo days after the first anniversary of the quake, and it probably could have been pushed back a month.
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However, thatâs not the realism, Iâm talking about. Thatâs not it at all.
Itâs the yakuza. More importantly, what they stand for. Here that is, distilled in a zombie video game. Their image might be of tough guys breaking the law or fighting over turf, but itâs sometimes the yakuza who are helping those who need it most. A famous example is 1995âs Great Hanshin Earthquake ravaged Kobe. In the aftermath, police, fire, and rescue worked as hard as they could to save lives and rebuild. So did Japanese organized crime.
âThe yakuza are Japanâs mafia but unlike other countries, they are
semi-legal entities, regulated by the authorities, but their existence
is not banned,â Jake Adelstein recently told Kotaku. The author of Tokyo Vice, Adelstein worked as an investigative journalist in Japan for sixteen years, covering crime and the yakuza.
Rather, Adelstein pointed out, Japanese gangsters have offices, business cards, and even fanzines. âThe police call them âboryokudanâ (violent groups),â Adelstein said, âbut they insist that they are âninkyodantaiâ (humanitarian groups).â
The majority of yakuza money comes via illegal activities, such as fraud, extortion, or gambling. However, said Adelstein, they actually sometimes help out those in need. Itâs also part of their PR campaign that casts yakuza as the good guys, and not just evil thugs.
âI jokingly refer to the modern profit driven yakuza as âGoldman Sachs with gunsâ but thatâs actually unfair to the yakuza,â said Adelstein. âThey actually have some ethical standards.â
The ethical standards Adelstein is talking about is the yakuza code. In theory, Adelstein said, yakuza are not supposed to steal or loot, rob people, use or sell drugs, rape, or do anything that disrupts âninkyodoâ or the ânoble way.â
For yakuza, the Japanese character âninâ (ä»») is very important as it appears in âninkyoâ (ä»»äŸ ). Incidentally, it also appears in âNintendoâ (任怩ć ), underscoring the companyâs possible gangster connection
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This makes yakuza the ideal heroes for, well, a zombie invasion. Instead of running around stealing stereos of simply thinking of themselves, theyâre out to help others and follow their code.
The characters in Dead Souls are far cartoonier than in the other Yakuza games. While Dead Soulsâ dialogue, story, and voice acting is top shelf, the controls and shooting arenât nearly as good in other zombie games (and the camera is a mess), but this core elementâhaving yakuza handle a disasterâfeels very authentic. It feels authentic, because it is.
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After the Tohoku Earthquake, yakuza, once again, offered humanitarian aid and assistance to those in needâsomething Adelstein covered first hand as well as detailing in the book Reconstructing 3/11âfor which heâs giving his royalties to charity, like âa good yakuza.â
Yakuza: Dead Souls was completed in advance of the recent disaster. It does not reflect it. And in-game images of helpless Self-Defense Members ineffectively dealing with the crisis as gangsters step in to clean up are overstated. However, time and time again, these gangsters have shown themselves worthy of their own âninkyodantaiâ (humanitarian group) moniker.
In Dead Souls, Sega presents a crazy âwhat ifâ scenario, switching out a real disaster with fantasy. So what if zombies did invade Tokyo? Would you want a band of yakuza thugs to get your back?
âHell, yes,â said Adelstein. âTheyâre tough, self-sacrificing (for their pals), and know how to use guns and grenades which are illegal to even own in Japan, by the way.â And itâs not only a zombie invasion in which you might want their help.
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