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2072.SHINOBI.REV
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1990-12-22
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SHINOBI
Welcome to SHINOBI, where you will rely on mastery, might, magic, and
disappointment throughout the game. Yes, SHINOBI is one of those games that
looks great on the outside, and terrible on the inside. When I first received my
review copy, I was thrilled with the screen shots on the back of the box; I
thought the game was really going to be good, maybe even an ultimate classic.
This is not the case. I promptly put the disk in the drive and started playing
the worst arcade game I've seen in along time. Something must be wrong, I
thought. I compared the back of the box to the screen. It doesn't even look like
the same game. (This review is based on the IBM-PC version.)
As far as I can tell, SHINOBI doesn't have much of a plot. You are Joe Musashi,
Master Ninja, and you are trained in the ancient art of Shinobi. The evil Ring
of Five has kidnapped the children of the world's leaders, and your job is to
find them. What is the Ring of Five? I suppose they are five villains; don't ask
me, the manual doesn't say. Whoops...that's my mistake: SHINOBI doesn't have a
manual. It has a pamphlet. A very sparsely documented pamphlet.
There are five missions in SHINOBI: Ken Oh, Black Turtle, Mandara, Lobster, and
Masked Ninja. There's no description of what you do in these missions, and I
can't find any mention of how they differ; maybe just in name. When you finally
start playing SHINOBI, you come up against shooting thugs, frogmen, gunmen,
green ninjas, and mongos. In each mission, there are several rounds -- I can't
tell you exactly how many, because the pamphlet doesn't say.
During play, your character bounces around sporadically, because the animation
is very choppy. To fight back against the onslaught of thugs and vandals, you
start out with ninja stars. You can also pick up other weapons throughout the
game. I don't know what kinds of weapons, because there isn't a list.
Your magic abilities are called Ninja Magic. Ninja Magic kills all the normal
enemies onscreen, but only weakens the leaders of The Ring of Five. I can
describe the graphics to you in one word: mediocre. And in a game of this
quality, you'd expect the sound to be equal to the animation and graphics,
right? Right: The sound is about as good as the graphics and animation. You you
hear a nice "ping" when you throw a star and you can hear different "pings"
throughout the game.
The IBM-PC version of SHINOBI is packaged with the above-mentioned pamphlet and
a 3-1/2" disk. I suppose you can obtain a 5-1/4" version somehow, but I couldn't
find any information about it. SHINOBI requires 512K of RAM and MS-DOS 2.0 or
higher to run on IBMs and compatibles. It is copy-protected. The program
supports CGA/MCGA/EGA/VGA/Tandy graphics cards. You can use the joystick or
keboard to control your characters' actions on the screen. The game doesn't
display in true VGA mode, and I doubt that it supports true MCGA.
SHINOBI is a poor game with so-so graphics, pitiful animation, and pathetic
sound. There isn't much to the documentation, but this may be a plus to some of
you. If you're a fan of ninja games and you want to try this one, you might
consider waiting for a different version.
SHINOBI is published and distributed by Mindscape.
*****DOWNLOADED FROM P-80 SYSTEMS (304) 744-2253