The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games

Lost Planet® 2

Lost Planet 2, the sequel to Lost Planet™: Extreme Condition, the landmark third-person shooter that sold over 2.3 million units worldwide, is now available on Steam!

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games

Godzilla and his atomic breath are one of the most recognizable metaphors for the atomic bombings of WWII—and they're also icons of Japanese pop culture. With a steady supply of Kaiju movies, giant monsters nestled themselves comfortably in video games, creating a huge library of monster mayhem-based titles. We have selected some of them, both niche and well-known, featuring battles with these towering beasts.


Daikaijuu Deburas (NES - 1990)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


Shadow Of The Colossus (PS2 - 2005)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


Super Godzilla (SNES - 1993)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


Cho Aniki (PC Engine - 1992)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


Godzilla Generations (Sega Dreamcast - 1998)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


Dark Souls (PS3/360/PC - 2011/2012)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


Lost Planet 1-2 (PS3/360/PC - 2006/2010)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


Ultraman: Towards The Future (SNES/Sega Genesis - 1991/1993)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games


King Of The Monsters 1-2 (SNES/Sega Genesis/NeoGeo - 1991/1992)

The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games The Awesome Giant Monsters of Japanese Video Games

Do you know any other huge monsters from Japanese video games? Show us with visuals in the comments below.

sources: ObscureVideoGames, SaikyoMog's LP, HardcoreGaming101, dloredo01's LP, ClassicGameRoom, Fang Wolfox's LP, PrepareToDie