![]() ![]() ![]() In Mark of the Ninja, you’ll know what it is to truly be a ninja. You must be silent, agile and clever to outwit your opponents in a world of gorgeous scenery and flowing animation. Marked with cursed tattoos giving you heightened senses, every situation presents you with options. Will you be an unknown, invisible ghost, or a brutal, silent assassin? Upgrade new tools and techniques that suit your playstyle and complete optional objectives to unlock entirely new ways to approach the game. Finish the main story to unlock a New Game Plus mode with even more options and challenges. I played this when it was released and just recently revisited it. Out of all the ninja games out there, this is one of the best. There’s a delicious thrill in lurking around in the dark and stealthily dispatching enemies in creative and sneaky ways. The game gives you plenty of tools to dispatch your foes so your job is never boring. The game is helped by its smooth animation and creative design. Yes, it’s cartoony, but the game world is serious and mature. I was surprised to see a few negative reviews on the steam page. It seems most of the criticism is about the repetition, but I guess this depends on taste. If you think killing foe after foe with a vast array of ninja techniques and tools throughout a level will bore you, you probably shouldn’t play ninja games. I mean, what else do you expect from a game called Mark of the Ninja? What do they think they’ll find? Crafting? Farming? Visual novel romance? Screwing up isn’t painful – Some games leave you reeling if you do a small screw up in a level, but Mark of the Ninja: Remastered does a really good job using checkpoints. ![]()
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