Seppuku! Review

Seppuku!

In 1997, I was but a grasshopper. When Bushido

Blade
arrived at the doorstep of my quaint two-bedroom/one-bath dojo, I accepted

the review challenge with trepidation. Was I up to the task of handling such a

raw deviation from the standard fighting games I had previously reviewed? Could

I successfully complete a review while maintaining my honor, or would I disgrace

my family AND the Shaolin temple?

It was difficult, that’s for certain, as I was not allowed to stab my review

in the back nor hit it while it was down. But by adhering to the sacred and

mysterious laws of Bushido, I was able to finish my review while maintaining

my honor. It was a major step for gaming and an important milestone in my training.

Now it is 2001, and as an old, wizened master, I come to you with a tale of

great suffering, of great heartache. It is a tale of a game gone awry. It is

a tale of a game that has lost its honor. And I am the master who has been stabbed

in the back.

In truth, Kengo: Master of Bushido is just a ‘spirited’ sequel to the

Bushido Blade games on the original PSX. Still, it’s made by the same

developer and follows the same mold. But somehow, this warrior fails to deliver

the promise set up by the previous incarnations.

I should have known something was amiss when I decided to read the manual. Usually

this leads to a better understanding of the controls and whatnot, but in this

case it only clarified the first enormous mistake the developers made with Kengo.

I quote:


"Japan's Genroku Period was from 1688 to 1704. The age of bloody wars had 
ended and warriors could no longer make a name for themselves through battle. 
Yet there were still many who were fascinated by the master swordsman's way of 
life."

So in other words, what we have here is a samurai game taking place AFTER the

time when samurai were considered battlefield heroes. That’s sort of like making

a basketball game that takes place during the off-season. Why did they do this?

My best guess points to a potent combination of lead poisoning and lyme disease.

The single player game attempts to simulate the thrilling life of an intellectual

ex-samurai. Basically, you choose one of three characters, train him to be a

swordsman, pick fights with other schools to learn their techniques and eventually

enter a tournament to prove that you are a master.

Training involves typical off-season samurai activities such as chopping down

bamboo sticks, standing beneath a waterfall, meditating, and extinguishing candles

with your blade. Most involve button timing exercises and have very little mini-game

depth or appeal. Kind of neat at first, but they all get quite tedious and boring

after the 20th time.

As you challenge other schools, you acquire new moves. This leads to easily

the best part of the game – customizing forms.

In effect, you can choose three moves to turn into a combo, then set that

combo as one of the four trigger buttons. With 4 different styles programmed

into the triggers, you can really create a unique fighter. Additionally, beating

an opposing school will yield a sword. When equipped, the different swords each

have a specific ‘secret technique’ (ie. ‘Big Ass Move’).

For the most part, though, you actually fight with wooden swords, bokken

to be exact. You only use real steel swords in Tournaments and in a few grudge

matches. I feel gypped.

In

addition to the single player game, you can check out Tournament mode (which

just lets you fight without care for the training) or play against a friend.

That’s it. No Survival mode, Team Battles, editable replays…nothing. This

skimpiness takes the whole ‘Zen ascetic’ thing a little too far.

The presentation is mixed. The fighters looks good and the actual sword strikes

are very cool, but movement in general is dumpy, with fighters sliding around

without moving their legs half the time. Very little effort went into character

design. The students you face when you challenge dojos all have identical faces.

Clone wars!

While the graphics are subpar, the voice acting is great. No dubbing here –

it’s all authentic Japanese with subtitles. Given, no one says anything interesting,

but still, props to the voices.

The fighting engine itself is awkward and unsatisfying. The game is in full

3D, but the camera doesn’t remain fixed and the control layout is relative to

your opponent. There is no auto-targeting, so you often wind up swinging at

thin air while your opponent is hacking air in the opposite direction. Compared

to Tekken Tag or DOA

2
, this just isn’t remotely up to snuff.

The original Bushido Blade featured multi-tiered levels and open-ended

screens; you could fight in six different locations during one round. The second

game
did away with the freedom of movement but kept in the multi-tiered

levels. Kengo hacks out even that last cool bit, featuring strictly dojo

fighting. Occasional matches right outside the dojo hardly counts.

For that matter, all the great concepts introduced in the original are gone. You cannot disable your opponent’s legs. There are no one-hit kills. There are no alternate weapons or throwing items. Even the rules of Bushido (which really helped the traditional flavor take root) have been tossed out. They took what could have been a revolutionary game and turned it into a bland, generic, below-average fighter.

Perhaps I expected too much. I was hoping for a samurai simulator that lets

you become Musashi Miyamoto, traveling the land looking for competition. I was

hoping for depth and ingenuity. I wanted Seven Samurai, but got Samurai

Deli
.

Even if you never played the earlier Bushido Blade games, Kengo

pales next to the other fighting games for the PS2. I suppose it’s almost worth

a rental, though I’d recommend just watching Yojimbo

instead.





  • Cool customizable moves
  • Great voices
  • Only fight in dojos!
  • Weak engine
  • Bland graphics

3

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