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The Legend of KageBy: The J Man
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This is a title most of you probably have never heard of. It's another ninja action side-scroller, but a very unique one. Its arcade action is fast and unforgiving and its acrobatics quite enjoyable, two things that set it apart from other titles. The Legend of Kage starts out like reading a page from the Videogame Plot Handbook. You are Kage, a fearsome ninja, and a group of evil ninjas captures your girlfriend. You must fight to rescue her. Whoa... look out, I smell movie rights. It's a lame excuse for some martial arts action, and this is in no way a deep game anyway. Legend of Kage has more in common with the classic Kung Fu than with Ninja Gaiden or other similar titles. Its premise is simple and its action unrelenting. Where Kage differs from both is in its homage to classic oriental kung fu movies, the same ones that Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon took its style from. The kinds where actors are doing wire-work every other scene, allowing them to run along treetops and up walls while trading skillful sword slices. A very limited selection of this kind of awesome is what you'll be doing in this game.
The graphics in the game are simple, and probably the game's weakest technical point. Kage's characters look like ones from an Atari game, and the backgrounds are sparse and generally barren. You will usually see trees in the foreground and slightly unfocused, blue-shaded trees in the background. Indoor areas mostly have one color for wallpaper. A ninja does look like a ninja, and a tree does look like a tree, but neither are spectacularly amazing. Kage's sound is a strong point however, with a simple but unobtrusive oriental background theme and sound effects that are few, but are used effectively. Thunder crashes in the background, fireballs sizzle as they pass, the clink of swords clashing together is easy to pick up on. Control, as said before, is simple and easy to handle. You can throw stars in all directions and run, climb, and leap with ease.
The Legend of Kage is certainly an entertaining game for a while, namely due to its speedy acrobatics, but it certainly isn't the best ninja game. Simply enough, it's too repetitive to be much fun for long. Even if you save your lady, she is captured again as you escape, and you are forced to play through a more difficult version of the same levels. It's a standard arcade trick, but one that doesn't do well when you're at home on a console and have the time to sit and play through large numbers of levels. If you like ninja action games, Kage is defiantly one to try out for its innovations, but doubtfully one you'll want to keep. -reviewed 4/17/01 - game copyright 1986 Taito
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