Summary
- Many anime series have high-quality video game adaptations, with PS2-exclusive titles like Astro Boy and Mobile Suit Gundam standing out.
- Digimon World Data Squad offers variety and player choice, distinguishing it from modern Pokemon titles.
- Samurai Champloo: Sidetracked is a cult classic combo-focused brawler with the same charm as the original anime.
Few mediums are filled with titles as broad and compelling as anime. Just like with any other form of TV, movies, novels, or video games, some titles hit and some miss, but regardless of what genres and styles viewers are a fan of, there will be an anime out there to meet that need. This style of animation hasn’t just punctuated TV and film from Japan for decades but has also crossed over a fair bit into video games.

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Many anime series get some incredibly high-quality adaptions into video game format. Much like the adaptation of movies into video games, this is a practice that isn’t as common anymore, but there are still plenty of video games that exist as interactive parallels to arcs and narratives from prolific anime series. Just going back a few console generations, however, reveals a plethora of anime series that found new stories to tell in the video game medium. These PS2-exclusive titles are some of the best anime adaptions around, and still hold up as excellent games today.
8
Astro Boy
Flew Under The Radar But Holds Up Very Well

Astro Boy
An excellent 3D third-person title with some fairly advanced open-world capabilities considering its 2004 release date, Astro Boy is a title in line with video game giants like Spyro, though it blends 3D platforming with a greater emphasis on exploration.
Some incredibly intense boss battles punctuate plot beats throughout the game, and it featured a day/night cycle that was once again ahead of its time for 3D games of the era. This title plays like a classic episode of Astro Boy and controls as fluidly and gracefully as one could hope for.
7
Mobile Suit Gundam: Journey To Jaburo
Large-Scale Destructive Action
Mobile Suit Gundam: Journey To Jaburo is an incredibly expansive game based on the anime Mobile Suit Gundam, and it reflects the sheer destructive action that the series is known for. Numbering as one of the best entries in the prolific Gundam genre, this title is a great start for anyone wanting to see what Mobile Suit Gundam is about.
After players complete the wonderfully dense story mode, a missions-based mode is unlocked, which allows players to experience a small bout of quests from the perspective of the Federation or Zeon.
6
Digimon World: Data Squad
Wonderfully Highlights The Merits Of Digimon

Digimon World: Data Squad
- Released
-
November 30, 2006
There’s an impressive amount of variety in Digimon World: Data Squad that helps distinguish it even from modern Pokemon titles in the best way possible. A much more dynamic affection scale leads to a plethora of alternate Digimon that the main characters’ partners will turn into.
Like many PS2 anime titles, efforts to emulate the cartoon’s style do not go unnoticed, and the game pops in a way that many other 3D titles from this earlier period in gaming simply do not. The variety of outcomes based on player choices alone make this game a must-play for Digimon fans.
5
Shaman King: Power Of Spirits
An Innovative Mix Of RPGs And Fighting Games

Shaman King: Power of Spirit
- Released
-
November 9, 2004
A slightly altered parallel to one of the earlier arcs in the anime, Shaman King: Power of Spirits fuses two genres that wouldn’t share much space together for a very long time. Even then, no game has truly melded fighting and strategic gameplay in the way that this one did.

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While operating at first on a top-down level like a strategy RPG, when the player ends their turn next to an enemy, it prompts a new battle mode that operates very much like a fighting game, where players clash against AI opponents.
A Classic PS2 Title
For the most part, Fullmetal Alchemist is not a series known for its video games. They never really made much of an impact and were often seen as little more than facsimiles of the proper anime and manga series, never fully capturing the depth of either original version.

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An exception to this rule, however, was the extremely compelling Fullmetal Alchemist 2: Curse of the Crimson Elixir. This beat-’em-up is a strong title with plenty of interesting combos to pull off and some fantastic handling. It’s a shorter game mostly geared towards existing Fullmetal Alchemist fans, but thanks to a quality combat system, even series newbies will get something out of this title.
3
Yu-Gi-Oh! The Duelists Of The Roses
An Exemplar Among Yu-Gi-Oh Titles
There are few mainstream card games as complicated as Yu-Gi-Oh!, and even long-time players can admit that the game was built to be a dramatic device for epic duels first, and an actual, playable card game with proper rules second.
This only makes Yu-Gi-Oh! The Duelists of the Roses all the more impressive. It is a deep, wonderfully realized interpretation of the anime and card game both, helping players feel like they’re truly summoning these incredible creatures to the battlefield.
2
Samurai Champloo: Sidetracked
A Cult Classic From An Incredible Creator

Samurai Champloo: Sidetracked
Samurai Champloo: Sidetracked focuses on an entirely original storyline involving the central cast of Samurai Champloo, an anime often in the shadow of its creator’s previous work, Cowboy Bebop. Despite not gaining or retaining the attention of its predecessor, this is an astonishingly good anime, and the same charm that goes into the TV show was put into this combo-focused brawler.
Players who have seen anything of Cowboy Bebop or Samurai Champloo will be able to tell that the original spirit is still intact here—which is no small feat, considering many game adaptions of other media tend to come off as soulless. It’s an incredibly stylish title, with a top-notch soundtrack and just the right amount of flair to its combat to satisfy series fans.
1
.hack//Infection
The Beginnings Of An Amazing JRPG Series
The .hack series is an interesting one to discuss, with the anime and video game adaptions releasing almost alongside one another. This title has fallen under the radar when compared to other anime shows, even those from the time, but there are so many things about this game that make it amazing.
There is something relaxing and immersive about “The World,” the liminal, dreamlike MMO that players act as avatars within during the story of .hack//Infection, and this setting, alongside the meta-textual moments where players can exit the MMO to return to a desktop, and the title’s overall critique of video games as a video game, just make this PS2 title something extremely special and unique.

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