Game 2004

Samurai Warriors (戦国無双) series

Koei Tecmo's hack-and-slash action series set during the Sengoku period. Each game features famous battles fought at Japanese castles as stage settings, with playable historical figures. The series uses Himeji, Osaka, Azuchi, Odawara, and Sekigahara-era castles extensively as backdrops.

11 11 castles featured in this work

Castles featured

Himeji Castle

Himeji Castle

姫路城 · Himeji-jo

Surviving

📍 Hyogo — Kansai

The undisputed king of Japanese castles — the only one that has never been captured, never burned, and never rebuilt.

A+ Tourism Score 92/100
B Defense Score 79/100
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Osaka Castle

Osaka Castle

大阪城 · Osaka-jo

Reconstructed

📍 Osaka — Kansai

Japan's most famous castle story wrapped in a 1931 concrete tower — the history is spectacular, even if the building isn't original.

A Tourism Score 88/100
C Defense Score 66/100
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Nagoya Castle

Nagoya Castle

名古屋城 · Nagoya-jo

Reconstructed

📍 Aichi — Chubu

Nagoya Castle is mid-renovation — visit now for the stunning reconstructed palace, return in a few years for the completed wooden tower.

B Tourism Score 70/100
C Defense Score 62/100
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Aizu-Wakamatsu Castle

Aizu-Wakamatsu Castle

会津若松城 · Aizu-Wakamatsu-jo

Reconstructed

📍 Fukushima — Tohoku

The castle where samurai Japan ended — Aizu-Wakamatsu carries the weight of the Byakkotai tragedy and the Boshin War's last stand, making it Japan's most emotionally resonant castle site.

B Tourism Score 72/100
B Defense Score 76/100
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Edo Castle

Edo Castle

江戸城 · Edo-jo

Ruins Free

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

The largest castle ever built in Japan — now the Emperor's residence — where you can walk the foundations of the tower that ruled a nation for 265 years.

A Tourism Score 80/100
B Defense Score 70/100
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Odawara Castle

Odawara Castle

小田原城 · Odawara-jo

Reconstructed

📍 Kanagawa — Kanto

The castle that Hideyoshi could not storm — famous less for its tower than for the legendary city-swallowing earthworks and the indecisive council that became a Japanese proverb.

B Tourism Score 72/100
B Defense Score 74/100
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Ueda Castle

Ueda Castle

上田城 · Ueda-jo

Ruins

📍 Nagano — Chubu

The castle that humiliated Tokugawa twice — Ueda's surviving turrets are modest, but the history of Sanada Masayuki's impossible victories makes it one of Japan's most compelling castle sites.

D Tourism Score 58/100
B Defense Score 76/100
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Gifu Castle

Gifu Castle

岐阜城 · Gifu-jo

Reconstructed

📍 Gifu — Chubu

This is the mountain where Nobunaga declared he would rule Japan — and the view from 329 meters makes it easy to believe him.

C Tourism Score 68/100
A Defense Score 87/100
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Odani Castle

Odani Castle

小谷城 · Odani-jo

Ruins Free

📍 Shiga — Kansai

Where Nobunaga's sister lived, loved, and lost — the mountain castle of the doomed Azai clan, with one of the great tragic stories of the Sengoku era.

F Tourism Score 35/100
A Defense Score 81/100
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Azuchi Castle

Azuchi Castle

安土城 · Azuchi-jo

Ruins

📍 Shiga — Kansai

The most historically important castle in Japan — Nobunaga's revolutionary 1579 masterpiece that invented the Japanese castle as we know it, gone after three years, its foundations still visible under the trees.

D Tourism Score 55/100
A Defense Score 86/100
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Kiyosu Castle

Kiyosu Castle

清洲城 · Kiyosu-jo

Reconstructed

📍 Aichi — Chubu

Where Nobunaga launched his conquest of Japan and where Hideyoshi's genius at the 1582 conference made him the successor — Japan's most consequential castle for two of its greatest leaders.

D Tourism Score 48/100
D Defense Score 58/100
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