
#RED NINJA END OF HONOR KURENAI XXX SERIES#
Mai's boyfriend Andy Bogard since 1991 - also from the Fatal Fury series, and Eiji Kisaragi since 1994 - from the Art of Fighting series.Mai Shiranui since 1992 - she was introduced in the Fatal Fury series.Several ninja characters and units are featured in Kessen (2000) and Kessen III (2004). The Legend of Kage (1985), its 2006 remake, and The Legend of Kage 2 (2008). JaJaMaru Gekimaden: Maboroshi no Kinmajou (1990).Izuna and her friend Shino are hidden characters in the 2010 fighting game Windy X Windam.Snake Eyes, Storm Shadow, Jinx and Kamakuraįree-to-play games House of Dead Ninjas (2011) and Super House of Dead Ninjas (2012).Ishikawa Goemon, Goemon, Ebisumaru, and Yae."Ninja" is one of the available job classes in Final Fantasy Tactics (1997).Yuffie Kisaragi - Final Fantasy VII (1997) and spin-offs.Ninja - Fighters Destiny (1998) and in its 1999 sequel.
Shadow Yamato - main character of Eternal Champions (1994), Eternal Champions: Challenge from the Dark Side (1995) and X-Perts (1996).Genra, Raidou, and Shiden ĭragon Ninja Clan in the magical myth and legend.Kasumi - the runaway ninja who is the series' main character since 1996 and also appeared in Ninja Gaiden.Ayane - also as a major character in Ninja Gaiden.Shinju and Kichi - Dance Central 2 and Dance Central 3.Bang Shishigami - BlazBlue: Calamity Trigger (2008), BlazBlue: Continuum Shift (2009), BlazBlue: Continuum Shift II (2010), BlazBlue: Continuum Shift Extend (2012), BlazBlue: Clone Phantasma and BlazBlue: Chronophantasma (2012).Mondo - first three games in 1995-1996.
Ninja pilot Hien - shooter game series since 1992. The controls and the environment do make the game murderously difficult, but you will rarely be at a loss as to where to go or what to do next, and the game will allow you to skip past every cutscene if you do so wish, which is good, as the game's difficulty ensures you'll be seeing them a lot.Īt an average price of five dollars or less, the Playstation 2 version is worth a look.The following is an incomplete list of video games which feature ninja, mostly in action and role-playing games, from the early 1980s to the present. The movement and combat controls are tricky, but they at least work as they were intended to, the boss characters are each unique and interesting, and the player is always given the option to engage in combat with every enemy in an area, pick them off silently, one-by-one, or simply pass them as though a ghost. Most importantly, the game actually works, which is more than can be said for most games rated so severely, or indeed, most games released in the years hence. The dialogue is sometimes awkward, though no more than some localizations and better than many, the controls are tricky to get the hang of, but reward the player who spends the time to learn them, and the character designs, while not universally appealing, are still solid, and at very least appealing to look at. The game puts the player in control of Kurenai, an orphan who has been raised as a ninja and developed an affinity for the very weapon with which she was hanged from a tree. Red Ninja: End of Honor was universally panned by reviewers for its sloppy controls, lackluster writing, and tacky character design. Exactly what it wants to be, for better or for worse.