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This is Suda51’s five best games, ranked from top to bottom.
5) Let It Die

Let It Die isn’t for everybody. It’s a dastardly difficult hack-and-slash game that has players trying to make it to the top of a tower filled with villains who are bent on their destruction. The moment-to-moment combat is tough enough, but some of the boss characters almost feel like the game is cheating. It doesn’t help that earning equipment and even understanding progression is a chore.
Plus, every time you die, your “death data” is shared with other players. That means some of the toughest characters in the game are actually other players. Again, this isn’t for the faint of heart, but if you’re willing to sit at the knee of the skateboarding grim reaper named Uncle Death, you’ll have a delightfully strange action game that puts your skill to the test.
4) Shadows of the Damned

For Shadows of the Damned, Suda’s team at Grasshopper Manufacture teamed up with Shinji Mikami, the man behind the Resident Evil series. The duo called it a combination of styles, as Suda’s “punk rock edge” met up with Mikami’s “psychological action thrillers.” Playing as Garcia Hotspur, fans go on a journey to save his girlfriend from the Lord of Demons.
As with most Suda joints, it takes the action to the extreme, giving players boss characters that are equal parts challenging and horrifying. It was a heck of a mash-up between the two iconic developers’ styles that mostly knocked it out of the park. This isn’t the only successful team-up Suda’s had. While it just missed out on making the list, Suda brought in James Gunn (Guardians of the Galaxy, Peacemaker) to write the script for Lollipop Chainsaw a few years later.











