Shinobi (series)
Shinobi is a series of video games created by Sega. The ninja Joe Musashi is the protagonist of the original series of games.
The first Shinobi game was released in 1987 for arcades and has since featured in a dozen other Shinobi titles. Along with Alex Kidd and Sonic the Hedgehog, Joe Musashi has long been one of Sega's flagship characters, acting as a mascot for a short time in the late 1980s when the ninja boom was in full force. The series' games are a showcase of Sega's technical accomplishment, noted for their high quality of graphics, gameplay and music, as well as their high level of difficulty. The Shinobi franchise sold more than 4.60 million copies.
Plot
The titular character of Shinobi is most commonly associated with that of Joe Musashi, the protagonist of the original arcade game and many of its sequels. His name is a combination of both an archetypical Western first name and Japanese last name, Musashi likely being derived from the legendary Japanese swordsman Miyamoto Musashi. In the manual of The Revenge of Shinobi, Musashi's backstory is told as that of a weak boy who first entered the dojo of the Oboro clan at a young age and gradually, through tireless practice and meditation, worked himself up to become the most skilled and respected ninja of his clan. His peaceful existence in the mountains of Japan is shattered when the ninja crime syndicate Zeed rises to power and attempts to revert Japan into the Sengoku period of civil war when the ninja thrived.After being defeated by Musashi in the original Shinobi, Zeed reforms three years later as Neo Zeed and attacks the Oboro clan directly. With his master assassinated and his girlfriend Naoko kidnapped by the enemy, Musashi swears revenge, and in the ensuing battles through a series of locations in Japan and America, as chronicled in The Revenge of Shinobi, all but annihilates Neo Zeed. When Neo Zeed returns in ', Musashi comes out of retirement one last time and destroys them for good.
In the arcade version of Shadow Dancer, Joe Musashi is replaced by a nameless new ninja and his canine companion as the game's protagonists. The ninja and his dog must disarm various time bombs spread across an unnamed metropolis that were planted by a terrorist group. The game was remade for the Mega Drive/Genesis under the title ', with the protagonist's identity differing between regions. The Japanese version identifies him as Joe Musashi's estranged son Hayate, while the English language manual identifies him as Joe Musashi himself coming out of retirement. In the Master System game The Cyber Shinobi, Zeed has resurfaced once more, this time under the name of Cyber Zeed. A grandson of Joe Musashi must prevent them from threatening the world again.
Shinobi Legions, however, presents an entirely different plotline. The titular shinobi is now played by Sho, the youngest of two brothers raised by a lone ninja master. The elder brother becomes corrupted and abducts the master's daughter in search of the ultimate ninjitsu technique, and Sho has to prevent him from destroying the world. Neither Joe Musashi nor the Oboro clan are mentioned.
Following a seven-year hiatus in the series, the lead archetype returns in Shinobi for PlayStation 2 as Hotsuma, another member of the Oboro clan. In a similar theme to Shinobi Legions, the game starts with Hotsuma slaying his elder brother Moritsune during a full moon Oboro ritual. The main plot revolves around Hotsuma's battle to defeat a powerful sorcerer called Hiruko and put an end to anarchy in Tokyo. The game also featured Joe Musashi as a hidden character, as well as Moritsune himself.
In a complete break with tradition, Nightshade featured a female ninja named Hibana. Hotsuma himself appears as a hidden character, though it requires a completed Shinobi PS2 game save on the memory card to unlock him. Joe Musashi also returns as he did in the PS2 Shinobi by completing 88 missions in the game. The protagonist of the 3DS Shinobi 3D is Jiro Musashi, Joe's father.
Gameplay
The main weapons of Shinobi are the shuriken, but over the course of the series the emphasis gradually shifted to a ninjato. One of the most important moves in the games is Shinobi's somersault, performed by tapping the jump-button a second time at the height of a jump. The somersault is used to leap onto high-places, perform trick jumps and use the hedgehog shuriken attack to wipe out several opponents at once. The ability to run was not introduced until Shinobi III.Another staple of the series are the four magical ninjitsu attacks Shinobi can use to kill their foes, or improve their own abilities. The four ninjitsu techniques are: Ikazuchi, Fushin, Kariu and Mijin. Another common feature of the early Shinobi games is the enemy AI, where enemies could duck behind boxes to reload their weapons after firing at Musashi, or hide behind boxes or shields to block Musashi's shurikens.
Each level in Shinobi is usually divided into two or three scenes, and the final scene is always a battle against a powerful boss character. Standard Shinobi stages include bamboo forests, dojos, Hong Kong styled docksides, and industrial complexes filled with biological monstrosities.
Timeline
The following is a timeline of releases in the Shinobi series. Listed are the name of each game, the corresponding release date and the consoles for which they were developed/ported. Further below is a brief discussion of each release. For a more detailed examination of each game, click on the corresponding link in the timetable.No. | International title | Japanese title | Year | Game system |
1. | Shinobi | Shinobi | 1987 | Arcade |
1. | Shinobi | Shinobi | 1988 | Master System |
1. | Shinobi | Shinobi | 1989 | Commodore 64, Amiga, Atari ST, Amstrad CPC, ZX Spectrum, MSX, IBM PC, PC Engine, NES |
1. | Shinobi | Shinobi | 2009 | Wii, Xbox 360 |
2. | Shadow Dancer | Shadow Dancer | 1989 | Arcade |
2. | Shadow Dancer | Shadow Dancer | 1991 | Commodore 64, Amiga, Atari ST, Amstrad CPC, Master System, ZX Spectrum |
3. | The Revenge of Shinobi | The Super Shinobi | 1989 | Mega Drive/Genesis |
3. | The Revenge of Shinobi | The Super Shinobi | 2009 | Wii |
3. | The Revenge of Shinobi | The Super Shinobi | 2012 | PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Windows |
4. | ' | Shadow Dancer: The Secret of Shinobi | 1990 | Mega Drive/Genesis |
4. | ' | Shadow Dancer: The Secret of Shinobi | 2006 | PlayStation 2, PSP |
4. | ' | Shadow Dancer: The Secret of Shinobi | 2010 | Windows |
5. | The Cyber Shinobi | 1990 | Master System | |
6. | Shinobi | The G.G. Shinobi | 1991 | Game Gear |
6. | Shinobi | The G.G. Shinobi | 2012 | Nintendo 3DS |
7. | ' | The G.G. Shinobi II | 1992 | Game Gear |
8. | ' | The Super Shinobi II | 1993 | Mega Drive/Genesis |
8. | ' | The Super Shinobi II | 2006 | PlayStation 2, PSP |
8. | ' | The Super Shinobi II | 2007 | Wii |
8. | ' | The Super Shinobi II | 2009 | PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 |
8. | ' | The Super Shinobi II | 2010 | Windows |
8. | ' | The Super Shinobi II | 2013 | Nintendo 3DS |
9. | Shinobi Legions #endnote_B| | Shin Shinobi Den | 1995 | Sega Saturn |
10. | Shinobi | Shinobi | 2002 | PlayStation 2 |
10. | Shinobi | Shinobi | 2012 | PlayStation Network |
11. | Nightshade | Kunoichi | 2003 | PlayStation 2 |
12. | Shinobi | Shinobi 3D | 2011 | Nintendo 3DS |
;Notes
- A^ Unavailable in PAL regions.
- B^ Released as Shinobi X in PAL regions.
Series