![]() I often screenshot and take some time to admire this game’s intricate pixel artwork. This is the nostalgia trap that Shovel Knight used.Īlthough the game sounds and looks somewhat like an 8-bit game, the enemies are expertly designed and meticulously detailed. The artwork and gameplay incorporate many ideas from more modern games. Cyber Shadow Genre:ĭespite being designed to emulate NES games, this game looks much better than any 8-bit side scroller. I don’t care if they are teenagers as long as I can be Raphael in a beat ’em up game. They are turtles, but they are also ninjas. Each character is distinctive because of the special skills and moves that help set them apart in that way.ĭon’t argue with me on this one. With your favorite Turtle, blast your way through pixel-art-created fantasy locations and hordes of foes. In other words, it doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel. It has cutting-edge gameplay with roots in time-tested battle systems. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder Revenge was made by the Beat ’em Up masters at Dotemu and Tribute Games. From time to time, April O’Neil and the turtles perform special moves from Street Fighter and other popular games, a clear tribute to the games that inspired them. If you look deep enough, this game reveals all things that the developers love. This game is a love letter to these characters and vintage TMNT titles Turtles In Time. ![]() This game brings Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello, and Raphael back together in a spectacular side-scrolling beat ’em up game. Mark Of The Ninja: Remastered is available on Steam for £13/$17/€14, but it's free if you already own the Special Edition and £4/$5 if you own the normal one.Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge Genre:Īction, Adventure, Beat ’em Up, Side Scroller ![]() Sure, it’s a bit inconsistent in places – both in terms of level design and central mechanics – but the good positively sumo slams the bad. It brings together elements of stealth classics, modern standouts, and a few of its own brilliant tricks to form one of the finest sneak-a-thons I’ve played in ages. "By and large, though, Mark of the Ninja’s a remarkable little game. Nathan Grayson's review was as enamoured with it as was, look: If I wasn't busy stabbing people in ancient Greece, I'd be very tempted to take another stab at not stabbing people here. Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure my pacifist run devolved into grizzly murder near the end. It's got extra stuff (if you haven't played the DLC): "Play as a young Dosun, get new unique items, an additional story level and unlocked developer commentary nodes throughout the original game." It's euphonious: "In-game audio uses new high quality compression and the cinematic audio is completely redone to improve both fidelity and quality." ![]() In the remaster we’ve re-exported everything in high definition up to 4K resolution on supported hardware.” It's prettier: "The original in-game art was compressed to 720p, despite the source material being drawn at a much higher resolution. There's a banner thingamy listing everything that's new on the Steam page, though a ninja has sliced off part of it and you need to open the image in a new tab to see everything. If you want slick stealth platforming that encourages creativity with an expanding toybox, this hasn't been bettered.Įxcept, er, with this edition. There's a bit where he throws flesh-devouring insects at a guard, causing a second guard to panic and shoot a third before fleeing at the sight of the first guard's skeleton. That trailer does a good job of showing off Mark's strengths. It's free if you already own the DLC, and discounted to £4 for owners of the non-fancy version. If this one passed you by, I'd implore you to snap it up. I say this because Mark Of The Ninja: Remastered has slunk out of the shadows, boasting prettier visuals, snazzier sound, and the extra items and level from the Special Edition DLC. ![]() One and a half of those times actually involved just as much stabbing and shuriken tossing as sneaking, but shh. I hardly ever revisit singleplayer games, so the fact that I've snuck all the way through Mark Of The Ninja two and a half times should tell you something. ![]()
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