Honkai: Star Rail
Honkai: Star Rail arrived right on time. Everything anime has exploded in the last few quarantine-locked years, especially in the W est. People are recreating JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure poses on TikTok, posting edits of Chainsaw M an characters and streaming as anime girls on Twitch.
Free-to-play anime gacha games have massively grown too. It only took six short months for Genshin Impact to make $1 billion in revenue after it launched in 2020, cementing its status as one of the most successful mobile games around. It blends the charm of a big open world with the detailed combat systems of action RPGs. It’s a Breath of the Wild that never ends. And with every new update, it expands its map and its roster of playable anime people.
To me, and I suspect many others, occupies a similar space in the Western gaming. It’s a distinct game with a distinct fandom, and almost everyone you talk to has heard of it or plays it. When new characters come out, social media fills up with fan art, cosplays and people commiserating on their gacha luck. Even if you only play games casually, is practically inescapable.