What truly elevates the mod is the emergent social layer. Suddenly, the game’s legendary codec calls and boss quips become inside jokes among friends. Hearing Raiden growl “ Rules of nature! ” while three other players are simultaneously suplexing a Ray? That’s not just co-op. That’s a communion. The mod’s Discord server has become a hub of shared clips—four Raidens all attempting a perfect parry on Monsoon at once, failing spectacularly, and then laughing through the “You’re not worth the ammo” reload screen.
Enter the Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance multiplayer mod. What was once a modder’s pipe dream is now a glitchy, glorious, breathtaking reality.
So gather your friends. Crank “The Only Thing I Know For Real.” And for the first time, watch as four ninjas in high heels launch a helicopter into the stratosphere—together.
The mod also introduces a simple but effective aggro system. Enemies swap targets, creating dynamic duels where one player draws fire while another lines up a perfect ripper shot. The damage scaling is loose, meaning you can’t simply stun-lock a boss to death; teamwork requires actual timing.
Of course, this is a fan mod. There’s no matchmaking lobby, and setting it up requires some .ini editing and a tolerance for occasional crashes. The netcode is peer-to-peer and can struggle with high-latency Blade Mode inputs. And because Konami has neither acknowledged nor C&D’d the project (a rare, wise silence), the mod lives in a perpetual twilight of “don’t ask, just download.”
Nanomachines, son. They sync in response to peer-to-peer latency.
Unofficially titled “Revengeance Co-op” or “MGR:MP” depending on the build, this community-driven project doesn’t just add deathmatch or leaderboards. It does something far more audacious: it rewires the game’s very soul. The mod allows up to four players to simultaneously tear through the main story, side-missions, and even the infamous VR missions. Yes, you and three other cyborg ninjas can now collectively embarrass Senator Armstrong.