- Publisher: Bandai Namco Games
- Release Date: Feb 6, 2026
- Also On: PC, Xbox Series X
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Feb 4, 2026If you're a fan of My Hero Academia, All's Justice is a perfect product to experience all the heroes, especially in their form from the latest story arc. The 1v1 and 3-on-3 team battles work very well, provided you disable automatic combat. All the game modes are also excellent. There's a feeling that a little more could have been done, but it's certainly the most complete project dedicated to the franchise.
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Feb 5, 2026All’s Justice delivers fast, explosive 3v3 battles where every character feels distinct and full of personality. The game mixes intense combat with exploration, missions, and collectibles, giving fans a lot to dive into. Despite a few rough spots, it stands as a polished, content-rich experience that celebrates everything My Hero Academia has to offer.
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Feb 5, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice truly is a treat for fans of the franchise, offering multiple substantial game modes and a huge roster of playable heroes and villains. It's not very welcoming to newcomers, however, and its Team Up Mission mode isn't always all that exciting to play through.
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Feb 4, 2026There couldn't have been a better conclusion for My Hero Academia than My Hero Academia: All's Justice, a game worthy of the epic scale of the Final War Arc, the last saga of the anime. Byking Inc.'s latest effort for Bandai Namco is a grand celebration of the conclusion of a trilogy and the end of the animated series, but also an attempt to demonstrate that there are still stories to be told in the My Hero Academia universe. Its main flaw is fundamentally an intrinsic characteristic: it's the third chapter that tells the end of a story that began in another medium many years ago, and its target audience is necessarily limited by this choice, but it must be acknowledged that the game does its best to make everyone feel welcome.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice is the perfect way to say goodbye to an anime titan, with so much content and flashy as hell combat.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice is a faithful adaptation of the source material that plays it safe within the fighting genre. It delivers exciting gameplay, a decent character roster, and a semi-open world mode—with all that entails. However, given some issues regarding story pacing and fighter balance, it remains to be seen how well it will hold up over time.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice delivers an emotional and content-rich sendoff for fans of the series, blending memorable story arcs with deep combat systems and multiple engaging game modes. While it doesn't reinvent the arena fighter formula, its fan-first design and attention to character moments make it a standout anime adaptation, even if technical hiccups and a steep learning curve may deter newcomers.
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Feb 4, 2026While far from perfect, My Hero Academia: All's Justice smooths out some of the rough edges seen in its two predecessors, presenting a simple yet polished combat system for this type of adaptation. With rich visuals and great fidelity to the original material, the game stumbles on minor details, such as the camera and environment interaction or complementary exploration modes, but none of this detracts from the genuine fun of experiencing firsthand the conclusion of one of the greatest cultural products of the last decade.
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Mar 3, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice excels where an arena fighter matters most: it delivers solid combat, chaotic triple-tag mechanics, and a massive roster of 68 distinct characters. However, the story mode presentation, the hub, and several side activities feel empty or low budget, with mostly cosmetic rewards and limited polish. It's ideal for versus focused fans, but uneven as a complete package.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice lives in a fragile balance, much like its characters: caught between the ambition to be more than a flashy anime tie-in and the difficulty of fully escaping the limits of its genre. At its best, it captures the weight of its battles, the emotional scale of the Final War, and that sense of growth that has always defined Horikoshi’s work.
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Feb 4, 2026MY HERO ACADEMIA: All's Justice is a flashy and entertaining fighter that folks of all skill levels can easily enjoy thanks to its intuitive and accessible control options. Plus, it looks excellent to boot and is full of superbly memorable characters.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice is the most comprehensive installment in the entire franchise, and thanks to its variety of content, it makes up for its gameplay and technical shortcomings.
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Feb 10, 2026A great game for those that know the series, but confusing for others. The 3-on-3 tagteam battlesystem works well and the roster is diverse. The game suffers from some difficulty inconsistencies. All in all, it doesn't rise above the competition.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice offers a huge amount of content, multiple game modes, and a visually stunning experience. For fans of the franchise, it's a true amusement park full of references, epic battles, and memorable moments. On the other hand, like any amusement park, the experience can become tiresome. The repetition of fights and animations becomes apparent over time, and the lack of Brazilian Portuguese localization significantly impacts the cost-benefit ratio for the brazilian fans.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice is an ideal choice for fans of the original series, an arena fighter with a huge roster of characters and multiple game modes that make it an option to consider if you want to enjoy an accessible fighting game that anyone can enjoy.
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Feb 4, 2026Ultimately, All's Justice is a better sequel than One's Justice 2 in many respects... but it's still not the definitive My Hero Academia game. It seems that the Byking team's efforts focused primarily on respectfully adapting the source material, as the Story Mode, Team-Up Missions, and side episodes offer many hours of gameplay with Heroes and Villains. Secondly, it's clear that from a gameplay perspective, this is the best installment in the series: the fights are more understandable, the animations are smoother, and the impacts are more believable. Unfortunately, the game falls short in a fundamental aspect of the experience, namely the richness of content related to fan service: too few alternate outfits, too few stages, and a rather cumbersome customization system.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice is sure to delight fans of the series. It serves as a fitting celebration of the long journey of Izuku Midoriya and the other protagonists, a journey that has moved and entertained audiences around the world for years. This is made possible by the large roster of characters, all carefully crafted, and by a solid amount of content, with numerous modes that not only revisit the story of the series but also capture the lighter, more carefree spirit of My Hero Academia. It’s a shame that the missions are overly simple, as it would have taken very little to make this the definitive My Hero Academia game.
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Feb 4, 2026I have mixed feelings about My Hero Academia: All’s Justice. At its core, it has a good 3D arena fighter battle system. Its best feature is its massive dream roster of My Hero Academia characters that all feel unique from one another. But almost every bonus mode and feature feels cheap and undercooked. Everything except the combat seems like an afterthought. But if all you’re looking for is versus battles with tons of My Hero Academia characters, then My Hero Academia: All’s Justice is a dream come true.
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Feb 6, 2026MY HERO ACADEMIA: All’s Justice is a solid, if flawed, celebration of everything that made the franchise a pop culture staple. It isn’t going to win over anyone who isn’t already a fan of the series, but the game leverages the hype of the Final War arc to cover up its repetitive combat and uneven story presentation. Regardless, the sheer size of the roster and the authenticity of the voice acting make it hard to totally dislike. It captures the spirit of the series well enough, even if it doesn’t quite go Plus Ultra.
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Mar 1, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice delivers an expansive roster and faithful anime presentation, serving as a dedicated gift for fans. However, the experience is hampered by camera instability, inexplicable difficulty spikes, and combat imbalances, limiting its appeal primarily to series enthusiasts rather than broader fighting game audiences.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice offers fans of the anime series in particular an exciting gaming experience that impresses with its fantastic presentation. Unlike Deku & Co., however, the gameplay fails to transcend its limitations.
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Mar 6, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice features fun gameplay and some nifty side modes, but the unbalanced battles in the Team Missions and story mode make for a bit of an uneven experience. The playable roster and additional narrative content are great, so fans of My Hero Academia may find it worth checking out for those features alone.
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Mar 2, 2026All's Justice delivers on the fundamentals for a great fanservice game. However, in some places it asks a bit too much from fans while failing to deliver what we'd expect by this point in the series.
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Feb 12, 2026If you're a die-hard fan and played the previous games, you'll definitely enjoy it. But as a video game, it might get a bit repetitive in the first few hours.
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Feb 6, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice packs in a lot of content and lets fans play through the final arc of one of the biggest anime and manga series around. There’s plenty here to keep fans busy, unfortunately, the overall quality doesn’t always keep up. Recommended for fans but not for everyone.
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Feb 6, 2026Byking has delivered more than a fitting send-off to this series. In many ways, this is a complete My Hero Academia game experience. However, these strengths make it all the more painful when My Hero Academia All’s Justice fails to reach its full potential. Despite the simplicity of its mechanics and more conservative approach to storytelling, attention to detail and earnest love for its source material make My Hero Academia All’s Justice a competent if unremarkable conclusion to the series.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice is a game that wants to be many things at once: a tribute, a farewell, a celebration, and an evolution of the franchise. It partly succeeds, especially when it lets the player enjoy its huge roster and its best fights without artificial restrictions. But its balance problems, a poorly tuned difficulty curve, and uneven execution prevent it from reaching the greatness it promises. A farewell with heart and ambition, but also with too many thorns along the way. Fans will know how to forgive them; everyone else, perhaps not so much.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia All's Justice delivers a more than decent video game adaptation of the manga's final arc. While not perfect, the title offers the expected dose of fun and enjoyment.
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Feb 4, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice is a fun anime game that does a solid job of adapting the final “war” arc from both the anime and the manga. The game features some completely over-the-top battles, as is common in the genre, and the final fight almost drove me crazy. Still, fans of the franchise and this type of game will likely love it, even though this is very much a title that truly appeals only to those who are already fans of the series.
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Feb 12, 2026Though there’s a bit of rockiness and jank under the hood, MY HERO ACADEMIA: All’s Justice is a rock-solid 3D anime arena fighter in a series of incredibly middling ones. There’s some real tacticality and dexterity you pick up with how much you’re cycling characters in and out, countering attacks and building up towards constant finishers. No one fight feels the same; I’ve done battles in and out of the Story Mode or exhibition mode that saw me dominate the competition or pull back a victory by the skin of my teeth after being knocked about for a good while. It’s not without its technical issues and padding in the campaign, but plenty of meaningful additions and lessons brought forward from prior entries make it a fitting enough send-off that stands out well in the crowd. Not quite a Detroit Smash hit, but a punchy good time, regardless.
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Feb 4, 2026While taking several steps forward compared to its predecessor, My Hero Academia: All’s Justice is not without its flaws. The Story Mode follows the anime and manga very faithfully, but grinds to a halt during an excessively long and lackluster final boss fight. Other modes increase the game's longevity and variety, offering some hints of an RPG-like structure, though they fail to make the side activities truly engaging. The combat system works well thanks to an extensive roster and diverse playstyles tied to the characters' Quirks, but it still suffers from legacy issues such as imprecise collision detection and a frequently problematic camera. For a fan of My Hero Academia, this is undoubtedly one of the most complete and well-crafted titles based on the franchise (though it must be admitted that the bar was set quite low), yet it remains far from the best arena fighters currently available on the market.
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Feb 27, 2026My Hero Academia: All’s Justice is an ambitious and visually appealing game that ultimately falls short due to its failure to prioritize quality over quantity. For the most devoted fans of the series, there may be enough celebratory moments to justify the experience. However, for those seeking a mechanically solid and satisfying arena fighter, its shortcomings are too significant.
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Feb 9, 2026With its sense of flash and dazzle, All’s Justice frequently inspires euphoria as you flit from one battle to the next. The action is breathtaking, to the point where it often paves over the game’s lesser elements.
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Feb 4, 2026Slightly above average – that's ultimately what My Hero Academia: All's Justice deserves in our opinion. We did have a good time playing it, being fans of the anime, and the game does it justice, even if it's not perfect. It's a far cry from the disaster that was Jujutsu Kaisen: Cursed Clash. But to recapture the brilliance and popularity of the Ninja Storm series, they'll need to deliver something much better in the future.
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Feb 4, 2026I desperately wanted to love My Hero Academia: All’s Justice. It looks, sounds, and plays better than One’s Justice, while having tons of details that fans of the series are going to love. And in Free Battle, where there's no ridiculous difficulty spikes, they probably will. It’s just a shame that loving All’s Justice outside of that mode too often feels like getting hit with a Delaware Smash, leaving it as a decent and incredibly frustrating game that should have been great. Hopefully it will be with some sorely-needed balance patches.
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Feb 4, 2026I really appreciate what Byking has done for My Hero Academia over the years. The previous games, especially My Hero One’s Justice 2, showed what a good arena fighter could be, and My Hero Academia: All’s Justice carries on that legacy. With a reinvented gameplay and strong moments in the story mode, the game stands out, but is weighed down by the excess of its other modes and doesn’t quite reach Plus Ultra status.
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Feb 10, 2026While My Hero: All’s Justice does a great job of putting the player in the climactic battle against Tomura Shigaraki, All for One and the remaining members of The League of Villains, having to trudge through the disappointing Team-Up Missions to access the Archive Battles and the one dimensional combat that reduces controls to spamming a single button makes this game hard to recommend to all but the most die hard MHA fans.
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| This publication has not posted a final review score yet. | |
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Feb 6, 2026My Hero Academia: All's Justice works well as an arena fighter, but it does even better as a tribute to one of the most influential manga series of recent times, even if it falls short in some of its new features.
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