My Hero Academia: All's Justice
Released: 2/5/2026
Score Breakdown
70.9
Critic Average
17 reviews
67
Steam User Score
568 reviews
N/A
Metacritic User Score
Disparity Breakdown
71 vs 67
Average of both sources
Review Disparities
Each point represents a critic review. Hover for details. Positive = critic higher than users. Negative = critic lower.
2/11/2026
Launch Window“he battle between Heroes and Villains culminates in My Hero Academia: All's Justice, which covers the Final War Arc. With a huge roster, multiple modes, and interesting story material, the new title in the series aims to be the best yet.”
80
80/100
2/9/2026
Launch Window“My Hero Academia: All’s Justice puts not one but a bazillion feathers in the One Justice fighting game series’ cap as it bids adieu. This includes a sizable roster plus various modes to keep players entertained as they go about their superhero business. The storytelling can feel a bit disjointed and the fighting isn’t as polished as the heavy hitters of the genre. For folks who like a simple, action-packed experience filled to the brim with their favorite My Hero Academia characters, however, All’s Justice understood its assignment.”
65
65/100
2/8/2026
Launch Window“My Hero Academia: All’s Justice delivers its best moments in combat, where fast team-based fights and a large roster give you plenty to explore. Animated story scenes add weight to the finale, but heavy summarization and skipped arcs make the narrative less complete on its own. Extra modes add time with the cast, though they don’t always match the strength of the core battles. If you’re invested in the series and want a solid arena fighter, there’s a lot here to enjoy.”
70
70/100
2/8/2026
Launch Window“A huge roster and solid modes can’t hide how many steps back My Hero Academia: All's Justice takes, making this finale fun but disappointing for longtime fans of the series.”
60
60/100
2/5/2026
Launch Window“My Hero Academia: All’s Justice lands somewhere between being better and worse than Byking’s other efforts. The idea of open districts is interesting, and the more accessible gameplay may appeal to the niche audience for anime-based games. However, the absurd difficulty of the story mode, the repetitive missions, and the stiff gameplay place the game in the lower tier of licensed anime titles.”
60
60/100
2/5/2026
Launch Window“MY HERO ACADEMIA: All’s Justice is a perfect end to the My Hero Academia trilogy of video games. It doesn't try to change the anime fighting genre; instead, it focuses on what fans want most: to spend time with their favorite characters, relive important moments, and feel like they're a part of the story. For long-time My Hero Academia fans, this is the definitive gaming experience. For newbies, it's an easy-to-understand and visually stunning way to enter the world of UA High.”
78
78/100
2/5/2026
Launch Window“MY 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.”
74
74/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“After previewing MY HERO ACADEMIA: All's Justice in early January, the early showing promised plenty to do in this game. As this game captures the epic finale”
60
60/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“My 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.”
80
80/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“My Hero Academia: All's Justice is a game where every advancement comes with some regression, locking the game in place rather than moving things forward. The use of fully animated cut scenes is a long time coming, but the inclusion of still shots remains disappointing. The expansion of modes is good, but the presence of a hub world as a replacement for a menu can feel unnecessary. The move to a full 3v3 fighting system is awesome, but the severe reduction of environments and removal of their interactivity robs the game of some spectacle that the series had been known for up to that point. In the end, the game is still good, but it's best as a complementary game to My Hero One's Justice 2 rather than a replacement.”
70
70/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“While 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.”
80
80/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“MY 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. 💢”
76
76/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“My Hero Academia: All's Justice, thanks to its story mode and the included roster, is certainly the most complete project dedicated to the franchise, even though it suffers from a difficulty level set too low.”
82
82/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“I 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.”
60
60/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“My Hero Academia: All's Justice is undoubtedly the best game adapting Horikoshi's work. Its combat system has evolved significantly compared to previous installments, and while it does have flaws and some missions in the new modes are repetitive, it compensates for these weaknesses with a decent integration of Quirks into its combat system and a well-executed active partner-switching system that allows for creative attack execution. Although it's not a demanding game for fighting game fans, All's Justice is a great entry point for understanding the basics of the genre without the absurd implementation barriers of the genre's flagship titles.”
80
80/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“I 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.”
75
75/100
2/4/2026
Early Review“MY HERO ACADEMIA: All’s Justice is the more improved version of the My Hero’s Justice games. Unfortunately, it doesn’t justify getting this game if you are new to the series. A lot of the narrative is gutted, and the controls can feel janky outside combat.”
60
60/100
