Ghostwire: Tokyo has a haunted, open-world Shibuya to discover, but just how long is the game? Here we’ll let you know exactly how many hours it took different members of the IGN team to finish the game, and what they prioritised doing with that time.
Everyone plays games differently, so read on for more details about how everyone played, how long it took to reach the credits, and how much extra time it took to fully explore a spooky Shibuya. Once you've finished the game yourself, be sure to submit your times on How Long To Beat and see how your time compares!
Amazingly, it appears that I've spent more than 24 hours quietly sobbing into sequential glasses of sake while exploring the world of Ghostwire: Tokyo. My tears, however, are not strictly out of sadness, but also of joy. For this game possesses an incredible ability. It's capable of taking me out of my current, hellish existence - surrounded by loved ones and craft breweries here in Sydney - and to catapult me to the happiest place on Earth - Japan.
Ghostwire: Tokyo has its flaws, but an inaccurate depiction of a modern Japanese metropolis is not one of them, so I spent a huge amount of my time with the game looking for excuses to go to new areas on the map. I cleansed torii gates and rescued clumps of spirits. So many clumps! I punched my way into a small fortune in Meika, tracked down tanukis in disguise and caught - well, ambled after - yokai. I even patted more Shiba Inus than really makes sense, stealth-killed more schoolgirls than can possibly be healthy and did a bunch of pretty crazily dull side-quests. Eventually, though, my Tokyo wanderlust caught up to gameplay reality and a reckoning was had. The short version is that I LOVE the verisimilitude of this
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