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    panda-venom128's Tenchu: Wrath of Heaven (PS2)

    [March 6, 2008 02:11:10 AM]
    GAMEPLAY

    This game does a good job making you feel like a bad-ass. The game gives you the opportunity to perform stealth kills given that you're able to get the drop on your enemy. The type of stealth kill you perform is dependant on your position in relation to your target. If you're directly behind them, you'll slit their throat, but if you come from the front and you manage to attack right before they see you, you'll plunge your blade through their heart. The coolest one, by far, is the "death from above" kill where I jumped from a rooftop and impaled the guy as I landed.
    Sneaking is easy enough. The camera gets in the way quite a bit, as my control over it is limited. It's really easy to get lost. Each level is like a maze. There's an item that allows you to mark you path on the map (colored rice), but you shouldn't have to rely on something like that to get through a level. In any case, I'm having fun, so hopefully, I'll learn to adapt with time.

    DESIGN

    Ah, the ninja: today's most misconstrued and fictionalized beings. A good chunk of what people know about ninjas is either completely false, or just plain stupid. Thus, a game like Tenchu, where an attempt is made to portray ninjas realistically, is more of a history lesson than a game...at least it is until the logs appear.
    You start every game with a grappling hook that you can use to almost teleport to higher ground. If an enemy is one the ground and you're on a rooftop, your enemy won't be able to see you, especially if the sneak button is held down. Actually, I take that back. I was running on a roof and was spotted by an enemy guard. All I had to do was press the sneak button and it was like I was like it never happened.
    The game's reward system is very well done. You're rewarded in small ways for almost everything you do. If you're able to perform nine stealth kills in a level, you're rewarded with new moves. If you're able to stay hidden, you're rewarded at the end of the level with new items. And it's not like you're given the key to the city for every step you take, so there's great incentive to perform well.
    Now to what you've all been waiting for: what's bad about it. Who the frag thought up the camera system for this game? It's like the game designer was made fun of in school and became bitter about it then sought revenge, but all they could think to do to get back at society is make it so people who play this game won't be able to see the cool stuff that happens. When hugging a wall, you're not able to move the camera freely, unlike while just walking. Instead you can only choose angles, like left, right, and ONLY if you're at the corner of a wall does the cameral focus on your character, allowing you to see around corners. Even when you're given control of the camera, you still can't see anything. You can only circle around your character, you can look up or down. The game has a view button where the stick that controls movement controls the camera...but you have to sacrifice being able to move! I guess being able to do both would have been too forgiving. Then you have indoor levels. When you're outside, sneaking around is great, but inside it's a completely different story. There's a meter that gauges how close you are to an enemy, but it's only based on proximity, so factors like height are impossible to take into consideration. This game was made in a time before surround-sound was standard, so you can't detect enemies by sound. When you're outside, enemies are far away and you can memorize their patrol patterns, but inside, confrontations are so up-close and personal that all you can do is turn a corner and eat cold steel. Mmm, my favorite...nothing fills me up quite like a sword rammed violently into my abdominal organs.
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    [March 6, 2008 12:28:26 AM]
    SUMMARY

    Tenchu: Wrath of Heaven is a single-player, story-based, stealth game in which the player assumes the role of one of three characters, each with unique abilities, and must traverse a level and eliminate targets without being seen. The player can employ various items to prevent them from being spotted, or in the event they are seen, use items that aid in escape or killing targets.

    GAMEPLAY

    One of the main gameplay mechanics is sneaking, and that's something this game does both well and not so well in order to establish the rules of the game. As far as I can tell, there are two levels of existance: visible and invisible. Unlike other games in the stealth genre, Tenchu features a sneak button where, when pressed, all your steps are muffled no matter what the circumstance. Remember that, it's important: ss long as the sneak button is held down, your CAN NOT be heard. Falling from fifty feet up? Hold down the sneak button. Jumping into a pool of water? Keep that sneak button held down. Walking though a forest of trees made out of rubber duckies and leaves made out of broken glass in Autumn, so the ground is covered with broken glass and the only way to avoid the glass is to jump on the rubber ducky trees but every time you jump on a rubber ducky, it squeaks, so you might as well walk on the broken glass, 'cause either way, you're screwed? If that button's pressed, enemy guards will be none the wiser.

    This game is an attempt at making a game where ninjas are portrayed realistically. For the most part this is true: I sneak around, I stick to the shadows, I don't disappear and reapper outta nowhere (...yet...I'll get to that in my next post). However, there are still some things here that make it undoubtedly fictional...and undoubtedly fun. For instance, there's an item that brings you back to life where you're killed instead of forcing you to do the entire level over again. Many games have done this before, but the way Tenchu does it is both clever and crazy: it's a log. After the death animation, your character turns into a log...that's right...A LOG. This is a reference to the ancient ninja art of making your enemy think they're attacking you, when they're just attacking something that LOOKS like you. Here, you just turn into a log and respawn...not quite grounded in reality, but it was still awesome.

    There are a bunch of realistic items like throwing stars, blowguns, caltrops, and smoke bombs, and they're cool, but...I want more logs...
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    Status

    panda-venom128's Tenchu: Wrath of Heaven (PS2)

    Current Status: Playing

    GameLog started on: Wednesday 5 March, 2008

    Opinion
    panda-venom128's opinion and rating for this game

    Hm...ninjas...

    Rating (out of 5):starstarstar

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    More GameLogs
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    1 : Tenchu: Wrath of Heaven (PS2) by nekoshii (rating: 5)

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