
Death Stranding 2 is out soon but Hideo Kojima’s gameography is full of weird games, from Penguin Adventure to a stock market simulator.
It would be reductive to describe Hideo Kojima’s video games simply as weird, but it’s the obvious place to start. He’s very much aware of how they come across, and plays up to the commentary about them, to the point where he was worried the upcoming Death Stranding 2 wasn’t divisive enough.
Death Stranding 2: On The Beach, the sequel to the original 2019 hit, promises to be another bizarre experience, with a stop-motion animated puppet as part of its main cast, a villain wielding an electric guitar as a weapon, and a very blatant stand-in for Solid Snake from the Metal Gear games.
With the sequel’s launch right around the corner, we wanted to look back through Kojima’s gameography and highlight the ones that stand out as the weirdest of the lot.
Boktai: The Sun Is In Your Hand (2003)
This one deserves recognition not so much for its content but for the fact that it was designed to be played outside. That’s because this 2003 action role-player for the Game Boy Advance had a light sensor built into its cartridge, with certain mechanics requiring you to make use of real sunlight, since the gameplay was all about fighting vampires.
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It’s certainly a novel idea, although anyone who owned a Game Boy Advance knows it’s next to impossible to see what’s on-screen when out in the sun. Also, it just flat out didn’t work most of the time in the gloomy UK. Nevertheless, the game did well enough to justify three sequels, although the last one for the DS removed the light sensor.
Metal Gear Ac!d² (2005)
The first Metal Gear Ac!d game was already weird for being so far removed from the main series, as it merged stealth action with a turn-based collectible card game, while also setting up its own continuity.
We have to give the point to its follow-up, though, since it’s not even technically a sequel and is itself set in another separate continuity. If that’s not quite nutty enough for you the PSP version came with a cardboard box called the *Solid Eye*, that you can look through to get a stereoscopic image.
While he didn’t direct this one, and instead served as producer, Kojima’s influences are still all over this game, particularly in regards to its overly complex narrative. It was quite good, but unfortunately it’s not available on any modern formats and the only other version was a Java ME port for non-smartphones.
Penguin Adventure (1986)
Penguin Adventure is only weird in retrospect, since it’s Kojima’s professional debut in the games industry and is so unlike anything else he’s made since, being a platformer for MSX home computers, where you play as a cartoon penguin.
A deeper dive unveils some humorously child unfriendly details, like one of the weapons being an actual gun and one of its multiple endings seeing the princess you’re meant to save die.
Despite its status as Kojima’s first game, though, he downplayed his involvement in a 2014 social media post, saying he only worked on it for a short while and didn’t contribute much beyond ideas for some of the boss fights and gimmicks. Even so, a penguin with a gun is still pretty weird.
Snatcher (1988)
What makes Snatcher so strange is that there was truly little else like it when it came out. It’s technically an adventure/visual novel, but Kojima’s love of film meant it had a far more cinematic flair than its contemporaries.
The influences it takes from sci-fi films like Blade Runner, Terminator, and Akira are laughably obvious, but this was many players’ first real exposure to cyberpunk stories. Although it was a commercial flop, it’s long since been vindicated as a cult classic.
Perhaps the weirdest thing about it is that there’s no modern re-release, although there was a radio play prequel that Kojima made with Suda51 and is, predictably, Japanese only.
Zone Of The Enders (2001)
Although he didn’t direct Zone Of The Enders or its sequel, Kojima is credited as the series’ creator and certainly had a lot of influence over it, with a 2003 interview translated and archived by schmuplations stating he was responsible for its world and backstory.
He also appeared to have enough creative control to be the one to scrap plans for a Zone Of The Enders 3, after the less than stellar HD collection botched remasters of the first two games. That’s a shame as Zone Of The Enders is a fun giant robot sim, although its mechs are much zippier than you’d expect.
Incredibly niche outside of dedicated fan circles, and growing obscurer by the day, Zone Of The Enders’ story is perhaps even more impenetrable than Metal Gear’s, with all the cut scenes and characters it throws at you; although the sequel wasn’t quite so bad.
Kabushiki Baibai Trainer: Kabutore! (2006)
Even some diehard Kojima fans may not have heard of this one and we wouldn’t blame you, since it only ever released in Japan on the DS. You’re not missing out, though, since this is no stealth action adventure but instead a stock market simulator.
While Nintendo was busy with its blue sky strategy, of expanding gaming beyond the normal core audience, Kojima’s response to games like Brain Training was what translates as Stock Transaction Trainer. It was a serious simulator, using real Tokyo Stock Exchange data, and successful enough to spawn two sequels.
None of them were ever localised for the West though, probably because so much would need to be changed beyond just the dialogue. Or maybe Konami’s US division just thought it was too weird.

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