![]() It really hits on all fronts: level design, enemy design, enemy variety, character progression, boss battles – it’s all top notch. Where Cyber Shadow does deliver, however, is in its gameplay. Progen, your master, or the members of your clan he holds captive. There’s little reason to care about the evil Dr. Shadow himself is a mute protagonist, and with one notable exception (who’s gone all too quickly) all of the characters he interacts with largely feel like they exist solely to be exposition dumps. Its big weakness is that there’s just very little personality to any of it. ![]() It’s a serviceable story at best, told through both in-game dialogue boxes and nostalgic 8-bit cutscenes with large, detailed, but still very low-res sprites, much like the NES Ninja Gaiden games. Cyber Shadow puts you into the pixelated ninja boots of the titular (cyber) Shadow, who awakens from an incubation pod to find a destroyed city that’s been overrun by out-of-control machines.
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