watermarked front cover of Ninjas & Superspies Revised, illustrated by Kevin Fales
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Designer(s) | Erick Wujcik |
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Illustrator(s) | Stephen R. Bissette, Denys Cowan, Angel Gabriele, Michael Gustovich, Kevin Long |
Publisher(s) | Palladium Books |
Publication date | 1984 (copyright) October 1987 (1st edition) August 1990 (Revised edition) 1995 (Mystic China) May 2000 (Revised Edition 7th printing) June 2001 (Mystic China 2nd Printing) |
Years active | 1987–present |
Genre(s) | Espionage, martial arts |
Language(s) | English |
System(s) | Megaversal |
Website | palladiumbooks |
Ninjas & Superspies is a role-playing game written by Erick Wujcik and published in 1988 by Palladium Books. The game is designed around espionage and martial arts action in the modern world, similar to movies such as the James Bond series or Chinese martial arts films. To that end, the game contains game rules for martial arts and mystic powers alongside rules for playing spies with gadgets, cybernetics and other high-tech toys. Mystic China, the game's only published supplement, adds character classes, martial arts, and campaign material focused on Chinese traditional culture (Feng shui geomancers, Taoist priests, etc.).
Characters in Ninjas & Superspies can take several forms. They may be members of a martial arts dojo, operatives for a government or private intelligence agency, soldiers involved in counter-intelligence, or even private eyes, depending on the selection of Occupational Character Class (O.C.C.). Each O.C.C. provides a base age which is modified by whatever combat training a character has and, in some cases, how long they have spent in prison. Most characters are highly skilled, with characters from the main book using the skill programs system to determine their skills, which provides a collection of related skills, and those from Mystic China using the O.C.C./Elective/Secondary skills method, which allows the selection of skills a la carte. Almost all characters have access to contacts from their backgrounds: martial arts characters may know people from competitions, secret agents may have worked with someone in the past, thief characters may have done time with certain people, etc.
While the game makes use of Palladium's Megaversal system, several unique elements should be mentioned. First is that the combat system in Ninjas & Superspies is far more detailed than in other Palladium games, containing more options for attack and defense to go along with the large number of martial arts offered. Instead of the standard four combat forms offered ("Basic", "Expert", "Assassin" and "Martial Arts"), Ninjas & Superspies has more than forty unique styles, with additional styles found in Mystic China. These are somewhat abstracted from "real" styles of the same names, attempting to maintain the feel of an individual style without necessarily showing every way in which it can be taught. Some martial arts have entirely unique forms of attack or defense, or unique powers, but most draw from the expanded list of standard maneuvers, combining them with martial arts powers to create the individual style.