Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
GamesRadar
GamesRadar
Technology
Scott McCrae

TGS players try Ananta, the game that looks like an anime GTA, Spider-Man, and Yakuza hybrid, and shockingly report that it feels like an anime GTA, Spider-Man, and Yakuza hybrid

Chenxiu wields a rocket launcher while wearing sunglasses in Ananta, from the PlayStation gameplay trailer.

Tokyo Game Show 2025 featured a demo for the GTA, Spiderman, and Yakuza-like Ananta, and would you know it, people are saying it feels like GTA, Spiderman, and Yakuza.

From the moment Project Mugen – now known as Ananta – was officially announced by publisher NetEase, it drew comparisons to Marvel’s Spider-Man thanks to its swinging gameplay, which was swiftly followed by comparisons to GTA and Yakuza once the game's open world stylings were revealed. In fact, if you throw every hit open-world game from the past 10 years into a blender and drop some anime juice in there, you might just get that.

At Tokyo Game Show 2025, the game had a public demo allowing players to try it out for the first time, with Automaton reporting on (and translating) some of the player reactions from Twitter. Japanese YouTuber Yanagi laid it out as straight as possible, saying, "Graphics: peak. Exploration: Spiderman. Battles: Yakuza. Story: Yakuza. Vibes: GTA. Conclusion: It’s a SpiderGTAYakuza."

Automaton also reports that some players are very excited to see references to their favourite games in Ananta, however some are a bit less keen about the lack of originality, with one user saying "I don’t want to say anything about plagiarism, but I feel like they’re going to get sued and change the [Spiderman-like] mechanics midway through" presumably in reference to the ongoing legal issues between Palworld and Pokemon's publishers that resulted in mechanics being changed.

Of course, from a glance at the gameplay footage, all of these characters are too young and too anime for the game to really nail the Yakuza vibe, as we all know those games thrive on you playing as a middle-aged man having the most melodramatic week of his life.

There is no Chinese GTA, veteran dev says, but Black Myth: Wukong was the starting shot for a stampede of AAA games made in China: "We have to make the games ever better."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.