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Shinobi 3D

Shinobi 3D
Shinobi.jpg
Developer(s) Griptonite Games
Publisher(s) Sega
Composer(s) Norihiko Hibino
Yoshitaka Suzuki
Takahiro Izutani
Series Shinobi
Platform(s) Nintendo 3DS
Release date(s)
  • EU: November 11, 2011
  • NA: November 15, 2011
  • JP: November 17, 2011
Genre(s) Action-adventure, hack and slash
Mode(s) Single-player

Shinobi, known in Japan as Shinobi 3D, is a video game developed by Griptonite Games (a division of Foundation 9) and published by Sega as part of the Shinobi series, and was released worldwide in November 2011.

The game is primarily controlled with buttons, but there are minigames that make use of the touch screen. Player controls the protagonist Jiro Musashi in arcade style gameplay; similar to the original 2D games. The game typically plays in a 2D sidescrolling fashion, using 3D graphics.

The game's story begins in the year 1256, where Jiro Musashi (father of Joe Musashi, the main character from the original Arcade and Sega Genesis Shinobi games) is summoned to defend his home village from the ninja forces of Zeed. After battle, he is sent 800 years into the future, where Zeed now rules with an iron fist. Aided by Sarah, the leader of a local resistance, Jiro continues his battle against Zeed.

The game was first revealed in the May 2011 issue of Nintendo Power. Sega originally planned to release the game in September 2011. However, due to slow 3DS hardware sales, they postponed the game until November of that year.

Shinobi 3D has received mixed to positive reviews, receiving an aggregate score of 69 on Metacritic.Destructoid praised Shinobi 3D for having "tons" of content, but noted that the steep difficulty curve and lack of coherent narrative may turn off some players.Official Nintendo Magazine UK similarly stated that "Shinobi won't be to everyone's tastes since we're now in an age where games are expected to be easy enough for everyone," but said it should be enjoyed by players looking for a challenge.GameSpot praised the way the game reconciles difficulty with accessibility, remarking that the game makes only a few missteps in this, and calls Shinobi 3D "among the small number of quality games in the growing 3DS library worthy of a spot on your shelf." However, GamesTM was more critical of Shinobi 3D, judging the "unsympathetic difficulty" of the game as "cheap and archaic within the context of plodding action." According to Eurogamer, "to call this a bad game would be grossly unfair, but it's a truly unexceptional one. For a series like Shinobi, that is dishonour enough."


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