Kaiju Wars

The strategy and kaiju genres team up for a big win.
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Kaiju Wars
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A Lot or a Little?
The parents' guide to what's in this game.
What Parents Need to Know
Parents need to know that Kaiju Wars is a downloadable single player strategy game available for Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Microsoft Windows, Xbox One, Xbox Series S and X, Linux, and Mac. The world is being terrorized by kaiju (or giant monsters), and as players assume the role of the Mayor of the fictional Floatio City, they will use military units and experimental, scientific weapons to push back the kaiju and save their town. At the game's forefront is determination and adaptability as the kaiju constantly evolve, causing the characters—and players of the game—to think of new strategies at any given moment to win the battle and figure out how to stop the kaiju for good. Despite the war being waged against the kaiju, the ultimate goal is less about their destruction and more the need to calm them down and try to understand where they came from. In terms of violence, the game's 2D visuals keep the action cartoony and tame. If you've been wary of the strategy genre before and how complicated some of the games can be, Kaiju Wars eases players into it, teaches them every step of the way, and wants them to overcome its many challenges.
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What’s It About?
In KAIJU WARS, the world is being attacked by massive monsters known as kaiju. You, the Mayor of Floatio City, must assemble your military forces to push the creatures back and save your city, but at what cost? They can't be killed; they can only be temporarily soothed into a calm state via a scientific serum so as not to destroy the entire town. You're being watched by a group hidden in the shadows, seemingly pleased with the destruction the kaiju cause, but why? That's up to you, the player, to figure out as you go through six acts, uncovering a different layer to the ongoing mystery of the kaiju. Where did they come from? Have they been put here by a divine being to punish humanity for its sins? Have they been here before us and are now reclaiming the world we created for ourselves centuries ago? Perhaps they're man-made; maybe someone somewhere wants to use them to dominate the world and make themselves the ruler of every living being through kaiju domination. These are the questions that will arise as you make your way from town to town, saving people from a living nightmare. Hopefully, you'll figure it all out before the kaiju complete their rampage throughout the entire world.
Is It Any Good?
Very few games so expertly combine charm and skill into one package. Kaiju Wars does exactly that and then some. A true love letter to the movies featuring gigantic, destructive monsters, Kaiju Wars does everything right from the moment you start the game and see the many screens depicting various scenes from classic black-and-white kaiju films, setting players up for what's to come. Strategy games tend to have a difficult time bringing in new players because they need to have control over a wide range of minor details, which can be overwhelming. Kaiju Wars introduces its mechanics slowly and in a way that's easy to understand, and once players get a firm grasp on how things work, it soars to new heights.
You start out as a brute simply throwing everything you have at the kaiju, but there comes a point where the strength and number of your units aren't enough. The kaiju are immensely powerful, and the game does a perfect job of mimicking the movies it idolizes and making you earn every victory against these behemoths. You have "projects" you can deploy, which are cards you can use every turn to sway the battle in your favor, like boosting a unit, slowing down monsters, or building more structures. But a mysterious force also has "dark projects" it can use against you that can throw your best-laid plans into total disarray. Even after a loss, players learn how to refine their methods to win next time, and once skill meets the ability to adapt to whatever is thrown at the player, hours of sheer strategic bliss are sure to follow. The games visuals are gorgeous, with the main campaign structured like a comic book. This lets players follow a central set of missions (including challenging, optional side missions) while throwing in a fun cast of lovable characters all trying to get to the bottom of the mysteries surrounding the kaiju. These missions are occasionally broken up with news reports featuring real actors, detailing the world's varied, often funny, reactions to the kaiju menace. Even the sense of progression from the beginning of the campaign to the end is paced brilliantly with the kaiju constantly evolving to expand the player's strategies against them, the design of the levels always changing, and the growing number and variety of projects you unlock and utilize along the way. Kaiju Wars is a game not unlike an actual kaiju threat: it's one thing to hear about it and potentially shrug it off, but once it makes itself known, it's a beast unlike anything you've ever experienced.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about patience and critical thinking, two central skills required to play Kaiju Wars. Does the slower, more structured gameplay of a strategy game allow younger audiences to better learn, retain, and apply information? If not, is a faster, more chaotic pace better for encouraging growth and learning skills? Why?
When you think about the standard kaiju media experience, do you think of senseless destruction and chaos without a purpose, or is there something more to consider? Should all forms of entertainment seek to instruct, educate, or teach a lesson, or can it be beneficial for some things to just be fun and entertaining without a deeper meaning?
Game Details
- Platforms: Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Windows, Mac, Linux
- Pricing structure: Paid ($19.99)
- Available online?: Available online
- Publisher: Foolish Mortals Games
- Release date: April 28, 2022
- Genre: Strategy
- Topics: Monsters, Ghosts, and Vampires, Ocean Creatures, Wild Animals
- ESRB rating: NR for No Descriptions
- Last updated: July 5, 2022
Our Editors Recommend
For kids who love strategy
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