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  5. Mortal Kombat 11

Mortal Kombat 11

Overall Rating: 3.97 • 1143 reviews
The Sprint Player The Resilient Player

Mortal Kombat 11 slows the series down just enough to make every hit, block, and punish readable, so short sessions still feel deliberate instead of chaotic. The variation system, strong tutorials, and generous towers give you clean ways to learn a fighter, finish a few matches, and keep unlocking gear without committing to endless lab work.

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Details

Some of the particulars and information about Mortal Kombat 11.
Developer: NetherRealm Studios
Release Date: April 22, 2019
How Long to Beat: 19 hrs

Great for:

The Sprint Player The Resilient Player

Ratings

Some of the ratings and scores for Mortal Kombat 11.
82 Metacritic
9 IGN
-- Our Score

Genres

Fighting

Systems

Here's where you can find Mortal Kombat 11 and play.

ESRB: Mature

Strong Language
Blood and Gore
Intense Violence
In-Game Purchases
Users Interact
Overview
Why Play?
How Much Time?
Overview

Mortal Kombat 11 revolves around deliberate one-on-one fights, custom character loadouts, and cinematic towers that break matches into short, brutal challenges and unlock-driven progression

Why Play?

Mortal Kombat 11 makes fighting games easier to settle into, with readable matches, strong tutorials, and rewarding towers that make short sessions feel worthwhile

How Much Time?

Mortal Kombat 11 splits time between a brisk cinematic story, short tower runs, and longer unlock grinds that reward repeat sessions beyond the campaign

Measured, Readable Fights

Mortal Kombat 11 plays at a pace where individual decisions matter. Attacks have weight, blocks are easier to read, and punishes feel earned, so even a short set of matches gives you a clear sense of what went right or wrong.

That slower, more deliberate rhythm separates it from faster button-heavy fighters. You spend less time guessing through chaos and more time learning spacing, timing, and when to cash in on a simple combo or hold your ground.

Flexible Fighters, Clear Growth

The roster is built around distinct tools and custom variations, letting you shape a character without needing to rebuild your whole approach from scratch. A few matches with Scorpion, Kitana, or Jax can quickly show whether their range, mobility, or pressure style fits what you want.

Strong tutorials and practical training options also make the game unusually welcoming for a fighter this deep. You can pick up core mechanics, test a loadout, and feel real improvement in manageable chunks instead of sinking hours into pure lab work.

Towers That Reward Time

Outside standard versus play, the Towers structure gives Mortal Kombat 11 a reliable session loop. Matches come in short, themed bursts with modifiers, character-specific challenges, and steady unlocks, so there is always something concrete to finish even if you only have a little time.

That progression matters because gear, cosmetics, and character rewards keep coming whether you are grinding mastery or just dropping in for a few fights. When a run goes badly, the game still tends to send you away with something useful, which makes repeated attempts easier to stick with.

Fights You Can Actually Read

Mortal Kombat 11 is worth playing if you want a fighter that gives you time to understand what just happened. The pace is slower than many modern fighting games, which makes hits, blocks, and mistakes feel clear instead of messy. Even a few matches can feel satisfying because you can spot your own improvement quickly.

That clarity also makes losses easier to accept. When you get opened up, it usually feels like something you can fix next round rather than a blur you never had a chance to process. It is a strong fit for players who want tense one-on-one matches without needing to live in training mode.

Short Sessions Still Reward

Mortal Kombat 11 does a good job of turning brief play sessions into real progress. Towers give you focused goals, match modifiers keep things from feeling too samey, and you are almost always earning gear, cosmetics, or currency while you play. You can knock out a few fights, unlock something useful or flashy, and stop without feeling like you left everything half done.

That structure makes the game easier to return to over time. Instead of demanding long ranked grinds, it offers plenty of self-contained objectives that still feed into a broader sense of progression. It keeps the momentum going, even if you only drop in now and then.

Learning A Character Feels Manageable

One of the best reasons to play Mortal Kombat 11 is how approachable it is compared to a lot of fighting games. Its tutorials are unusually helpful, and the variation system gives each fighter a clearer identity without making early experimentation feel overwhelming. Picking a character and getting comfortable with them feels practical, not like homework.

That matters because the game supports steady, low-friction improvement. You can learn a reliable combo, a few punishes, and a simple game plan, then immediately use them in real matches. It respects the effort you put in and gives you enough structure to bounce back fast after a rough set.

Main Story Playtime

Mortal Kombat 11 wraps its cinematic story in about 6 to 8 hours, with the main path moving through a sequence of character-focused chapters and cutscene-heavy fights. There is no open world or long-form exploration to slow things down, so progress is very direct and easy to track.

The game naturally breaks into clean chunks because each chapter is split by story scenes and a small set of matches. A single session can be 20 to 40 minutes if you just want to clear a few fights, while a longer hour or two works well for finishing multiple chapters in one sitting.

Completion and Replay Time

If you move beyond the story, a more typical stretch lands around 15 to 25 hours, while full completion can push 50 to 65+ hours depending on how much gear, tower content, and character-specific unlocks you chase. The biggest time sink is the layered reward structure, especially Towers of Time, the Krypt, and cosmetic progression tied to individual fighters.

Replay comes less from rerunning the campaign and more from short repeatable goals like daily towers, learning a new character, or grinding for skins, intros, and brutalities. That structure makes Mortal Kombat 11 fit well into short return visits, but it can also become a long tail game if you enjoy steadily unlocking things over weeks.

Trailer

A Quick Look at Mortal Kombat 11

Curious what Mortal Kombat 11 is all about? The trailer gives you a great first look at the world, the vibe, and the kind of story you're stepping into.

Mortal Kombat 11 Trailer
Videos

Related videos for Mortal Kombat 11

These videos give some tips and pointers on getting started with Mortal Kombat 11

Mortal Kombat 11 - Before You Buy

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Mortal Kombat 11: Aftermath - Before You Buy

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Mortal Kombat 1 - Before You Buy

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Mortal Kombat Legacy Kollection - 15 Things You ABSOLUTELY NEED To Know Before You Buy

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Screenshots

Screenshots of Mortal Kombat 11

Want to see what Mortal Kombat 11 actually looks like in-game? These screenshots will hopefully give you a feel for what the world of Mortal Kombat 11 is like.

Mortal Kombat 11
Mortal Kombat 11
Mortal Kombat 11
Mortal Kombat 11
Mortal Kombat 11
Extras

Downloadable Content for Mortal Kombat 11

DLC just means more of a good thing. Here are some for Mortal Kombat 11

Mortal Kombat 11 Ultimate
Mortal Kombat 11 Ultimate
Mortal Kombat 11: Aftermath
Mortal Kombat 11: Aftermath
Mortal Kombat 11 PE + Injustice 2 LE - Premier Fighter
Mortal Kombat 11 PE + Injustice 2 LE - Premier Fighter

Mortal Kombat 11 Ultimate

What’s Included

Mortal Kombat 11 Ultimate is the complete edition built around the base game, the Aftermath story expansion, and both Kombat Packs. That means a large roster upgrade with characters like Shang Tsung, Nightwolf, Sindel, The Joker, Spawn, Fujin, Sheeva, RoboCop, Mileena, Rain, and Rambo, plus the extra story chapters from Aftermath.

It also bundles the base game’s major feature set into one package, including online support and the custom variation system already tied to MK11. This is less a small add-on and more the version that rolls most of the game’s post-launch content together.

Is It Worth It

Yes, if you want the fullest version of Mortal Kombat 11 without buying pieces separately. The Aftermath story gives you a real narrative extension, and the expanded roster matters even if you only play casually because it keeps fights feeling fresh.

If you already own the base game, the value depends on how much you care about extra fighters and more story. If you mostly play a few matches now and then, it is nice rather than essential. If you want the complete package, this is the cleanest way to get it.

Mortal Kombat 11: Aftermath

What’s Included

Mortal Kombat 11: Aftermath is a substantial story expansion released in 2020. It continues the main campaign with a new cinematic chapter built around Shang Tsung, Fujin, and Nightwolf, and it also adds those three fighters to the roster. The expansion was also tied to a free update that added Friendships and stage fatalities, though the paid part is mainly the story content and characters.

Is It Worth It

Aftermath is worth it if you liked the base game’s story mode and want a proper follow-up rather than just a few extra matches. The campaign is short but polished, and the new characters fit naturally into the game. If you mainly play local versus or only dip in occasionally, it feels more optional, since most of its value comes from the story expansion.

Mortal Kombat 11 PE + Injustice 2 LE - Premier Fighter

This listing does not appear to be a meaningful Mortal Kombat 11 expansion. Mortal Kombat 11 PE + Injustice 2 LE – Premier Fighter reads like a store bundle or promotional package rather than actual DLC with new fighters, story content, or modes. There is not enough reliable information here to treat it as a standalone add-on worth reviewing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Have Questions About Mortal Kombat 11?

Do you need to know earlier Mortal Kombat stories to follow Mortal Kombat 11?

Not really. The campaign leans on returning characters and timeline resets, but it explains its main conflict clearly enough to follow the big moments. If you know the series, some reunions and references land better, but new players can still keep up.

What multiplayer options are in Mortal Kombat 11?

You can play local versus on the same system or fight online in casual and ranked matches. There are also private lobbies for playing with friends. If you want competition without a long commitment, online sets are easy to jump into for a few matches.

Does Mortal Kombat 11 have co-op modes?

Yes, but not in a full campaign sense. Some Towers of Time events support co-op against a powerful boss, so you and another player work together rather than fight each other. It is a nice change of pace if you want something less stressful than standard versus matches.

How brutal is the violence in Mortal Kombat 11?

Very brutal. The game includes graphic fatalities, x-ray style bone-breaking attacks, heavy gore, and exaggerated dismemberment. If that is a turnoff, this is one of the main things to know before starting.

What edition should you buy for Mortal Kombat 11?

If you want the most complete package, Mortal Kombat 11 Ultimate is the simplest choice because it bundles the base game, the Aftermath story expansion, and most DLC fighters. The base version is fine if you only care about the core roster and standard modes. Ultimate is the better pick if you want the full story arc and a bigger character lineup from the start.

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