
Suda 51 is renowned for his quirky gameplay styles and twisted sense of humor. He satirizes politics, TV, gaming and current affairs to deliver an often bizarre look at the world today with substance in his messages. You may know him for his work, such as No More Heroes, Black Knight Sword and Lollipop Chainsaw. […]
The early 2000s was a crazy, weird time of defeating dystopias with karate, sending texts via Microsoft Excel, and ignoring your pets so you could look at jpegs of pets. As its adverts might have suggested, the PlayStation 2 was no stranger to getting a little bit freaky either.
..that article /list is only scratching on the surface of the weirdness on ps2. There are way more obscure games on that console.
I would go alone with SOME on this list but a few arent even exclusive.. in fact the PS2 version of GIANTS is an after-thought and considered bastardized compared to the PC version.

The free visual upgrade for the PC version of Killer7 appears to have added AI upscaled cutscenes and textures.

Resident Evil creator Shinji Mikami wants Killer7 creator Suda 51 to work on a sequel to the 2005 action adventure game.
I would love a remake of this masterpiece!
Suda 51's masterpiece, the game is the epitome of extreme style over substance and surprisingly its a good thing. The story was very complex revolving around tons of characters, most of which wasn't in the game but included into the behind the scenes "hand in Killer 7" book which also gives the unique main cast of the game another substantial layer of lore. I would love for a sequel to be in the works but for now I am happy that The Silver Case, Suda's first game, is coming to NA for PC which I heard was even better than Killer 7. This is one of very few games that should have had a straight up novel to retell the game in detail.