But here is the thing: You should play it anyway.
NMH2 is a sequel that knows it can’t win. It tries to be everything to everyone—a shooter, a brawler, a tragedy, a joke. It fails at being a perfect game. But in its desperate, sweaty struggle to entertain you, it becomes something rarer: a game that is never, ever boring. No More Heroes 2
Travis returns from the dead (don’t ask) to avenge his best friend. The ranking matches are back—10 assassins, 10 brutal fights. But this time, there are no boring open-world segments. You select your destination from a map. It’s snappier. It’s leaner. But here is the thing: You should play it anyway
You start not as Travis, but as his rival, Shinobu, escaping a government lab. Within ten minutes, you are fighting a giant, pixel-art battleship captain named Skelter Helter while the screen vomits neon blood. The game immediately signals a shift: less satire of capitalism, more celebration of chaos. It fails at being a perfect game
"It’s not about the ranking, kid. It’s about the ride." — Travis Touchdown (probably)