Kamen Rider Revice: The Movie Access

Forget standard power-ups. Shin (True) Form strips away the bulky armor for a sleek, organic, almost biomechanical look. The gimmick here is "Vice becomes the armor." The dynamic flips—Vice takes the front line, protecting Ikki, while Ikki channels their rage. The CGI in the final battle is notably better than the TV series, with Shin Form moving like a fluid, demonic samurai. This is where Revice: The Movie stands above most Kamen Rider films. It is canon.

The catch? If you defeat your own demon, you die. If you don't, the demon kills you. It’s a Kobayashi Maru scenario that forces Ikki and Vice into their most desperate fight yet. Takanori Nishikawa doesn’t just act; he steals the show. His character, Hideo, transforms into Kamen Rider Daimon (later referred to as Kamen Rider Azuma in some media). Daimon’s design is a gorgeous, metallic inversion of Revice’s colorful aesthetic—all sharp edges, silver, and crimson eyes. His power set is terrifyingly simple: he can command any inner demon. kamen rider revice: the movie

Led by the charismatic yet menacing (the legendary singer and actor Takanori Nishikawa , aka TM Revolution), this family claims to be the "true" lineage of the original Giff contract. They believe the Igarashis are failures. To prove their superiority, they unleash a virus that forces every human’s inner demon to go berserk—turning families against each other. Forget standard power-ups