Highly acclaimed samurai action game Ghost of Tsushima has sold 13 million copies in 4 years

By: Vladyslav Nuzhnov | 25.09.2024, 12:14
Highly acclaimed samurai action game Ghost of Tsushima has sold 13 million copies in 4 years

We wrote that Ghost of Yōtei was announced at State of Play - the game takes place 300 years after Tsushima, and we will play as a girl. At the same time, we learned about the number of copies of Ghost of Tsushima sold.

Here's What We Know

The New York Times article about Yōtei revealed that in the 4 years since its release, Ghost of Tsushima has sold 13 million copies (this includes the PS4 version, as well as the Director's Cut edition for PS5 and PC).

The game is available on PC, PlayStation 4/5, and has received high marks from players and critics. The second game in the universe will be released on PlayStation 5 in 2025.

Ghost of Tsushima is an open-world adventure game where the player has to save the island of Tsushima from Mongol invaders. First of all, it is worth noting the picturesque and sometimes fabulous Tsushima. Forests, lakes, fields of flowers, beaches, mountains and Japanese architecture create a variety of landscapes and give the gaming industry one of the most beautiful games. It is simply impossible to pass by a field with red flowers or ride a horse through a forest with golden trees and not use the game's photo mode.

Speaking of the gameplay, its feature is a unique combat system. There are 4 samurai stances available to use against different types of enemies. In the arsenal of our warrior there is a katana that will help turn the battlefield into a dance of death, two bows, kunai, smoke bombs, bombs and poison darts. If you skilfully combine these, it will be a pleasure to clear the lands of Tsushima from the enemy. The story revolves around the samurai Jin Sakai, who is one of the few survivors of the first battle for the island. Sakai will have to break the samurai code and choose a new path - the path of a ghost. He will also have to create a new army to bring peace back to his native land.

Source: nytimes