Write what you are looking for and press enter to begin your search!

Logo
live-news-icon

Live News

The MCU X-Men Movie Is In Talks With Hunger Games Prequel Writer For The Project: In an intense match, the Lone Wolves came out victorious. Read all about the big night here // Kingdom Hearts Steam PC Trailer New Version Of Simple And Clean Will Make You Feel Nostalgic: In an intense match, the Lone Wolves came out victorious. Read all about the big night here // Elden Ring Shadow Of The Erdtree Gets Epic Story Trailer: In an intense match, the Lone Wolves came out victorious. Read all about the big night here
post-16 post-13

Samurai Maiden Is Strictly For D3 Janky Action Fans, And No One Else

Platform(s): PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4
Genre: 3D action game with ninjas, samurais, fox ladies, and girl love

If you like your action games cheaply made and overpriced, look no further than D3 Publisher and developer Shade Inc.’s latest title Samurai Maiden.

The game pits you as a young schoolgirl named Tsumugi who gets warped from her 21st-century trappings into the Sengoku period. She teams up with three ninja females as they help out Nobunaga fight off the undead horde in 24 different stages filled with action and platforming. Along the way, Tsumugi gets to bond with said ninjas: ninja-in-training Iyo who has the same body type as Tsumugi, mechanical arm ninja Hagane with the well-endowed big sister archetype, and haughty fox ninja lady Komimi with the tsundere vibe.

The trio also have their respective elements skills that can help with hindering the opposition: Iyo with fire shurikens and the ability to carry and place items on-stage, Hagane with her Lightning gauntlet and grapple skill to swing to places, and Komimi with her onmyoji Ice hammer magic and her bomb-carrying-and-throwing skills. They don’t do squat unless you command them, which makes them kinda useless if you’re not active with your support and assist buttons.

 

Girl Wood

In case the feature image on the review didn’t tip you off, Samurai Maiden is a yuri game, meaning the girls will eventually fall in love with each other throughout the course of the story. After all, when you activate your special sword buff powers, the game transitions to a scene where you get publicly intimate with your ninja partner. Tsumugi will form bonds via bringing them to battle, and will talk/train with them through a series of visual novel segments that may either entertain or bore you depending on your tolerance for anime nonsense and a lot of back-and-forth.

Did I like it? Well, I did skip portions of it because I know where most of the conversations are headed. This isn’t my first anime game rodeo, but if you’re into all the anime tropes and romance bits that entail, you’ll find something to love here.

The bonds you forge aren’t just for show; Tsumugi will gain new moves from being more than friends with the trio. Iyo will give you new sword combos, while Hagane gives you aerial attacks. Komimi will give you quick getup evades and parries, so you’d do well to replay stages to get their relationships higher and higher for those new skills.

As the relationship meter gets higher, you also unlock Pocket Bubble character stories & quests: you bring one of the ninjas through a short puzzle stage and also unlock their new weaponry with skills and upgradeable stats. These also unlock new artwork as well as flesh out the ninja gals’ stories and history further. I’ll have to admit: the Pocket Bubble stages are quick bouts of platforming and simple puzzle-solving fun that made me tolerate the Samurai Maiden experience.

 

Finger Maidens

You’ll need all the help you can get here because Samurai Maiden gets downright dirty like a D3 game. You only have one life in a stage; there are checkpoints that give you extra lives, but the undead you face can overwhelm you, at least in the later stages. You have your grunts, your giant heavies, your ogre enemies, your heavy ogres, and a ton of flying skulls that explode in your face. The enemy variety is lacking, to say the least, but they can get cheap and tough to fight especially in droves. The heavy enemies cannot be interrupted at all unless you use the corresponding elements to stun them. Most enemy attacks come out pretty fast and can deal big damage if you’re not careful.

This wouldn’t be an issue if it weren’t for the paltry defense options you have. Some of your heavy attacks have terrible recovery, and your evade isn’t that reliable. Your lock-on completely focuses the camera onto your target to the point where it can get janky and bonkers. When not in lock-on, your attacks somehow focuses on the weakest enemy instead of where you’re pointing your character with the left analog, resulting in a ton of frustrating moments when fighting. Even with the majority of the skills unlocked, enemies can dogpile you really quickly because they cannot be interrupted even with heavy attacks and can just knock loads of life away if you aren’t careful.

The worst part is the game throwing you into some questionable arenas, where you have a big boss type in a small enclosed area that is occasionally on fire, and multiple enemies with area-of-attack body splashes just fill up the screen with little to no room for you to evade and defend yourself. And some of these rooms even have disappearing floors, with the worst part being enemies that fall down will respawn back to the battlefield with nary a scratch. This is just bad action game design.

This leads to many situations where I just spammed my partner’s ninja attacks like no tomorrow. Most of the time, my victories are attributed to luck and how patient I am at kiting & positioning enemies for maximum damage. In an action game that’s supposed to reward you for skill, there isn’t any you can use here save for pure brute force (spamming your ninja assists and your fastest attacks). Heck, your stun and hurt animations recover quite slowly for a game that relies on fast reflexes and counters; don’t get hit unless you want to get juggled to death by ogre splashes and giant undead knockdown slams.

Add to the fact that you have to restart from the beginning of the stage if you die at any time just because of said dogpiling and enemy attrition, and the frustration tends to pile up for each replay.

 

Dull Edge

Simple and to the point with its yuri-flavoured storyline and trappings: That’s Samurai Maiden in a nutshell. It’s also quite a chore to play, as you can only get the best skills and powerups through grinding for relationship points with the three ninjas. The game’s attrition-based difficulty and finicky controls really hamper what could have been a brainless fun and sexy romp involving a high school girl with her potential girlfriends from a different era. If that’s the sort of arcade action you crave, by all means, go nuts. At the very least, it does have its moments.

Pros

  • Cute isekai story with romance sprinkled in.
  • Pocket Bubble stages are fun.
  • First few combat stages are alright, short, and sweet…

Cons

  • …until you see a lack of enemy variety and padded-out last few areas.
  • Gets very cheap with difficulty combat-wise.
  • Control issues.

 

Final Score: 50/100

Review copy provided by distributors Clouded Leopard Entertainment. 

Related News

post-07
Avengers: Endgame Is An Emotional & Epic End To Ten Years Of World Building

Avengers: Endgame is exactly what its name indicates; the end of the Marvel Cinematic Universe's Infinity Saga which has spanned over 21 movies and mo...

post-07
Summer Of Gaming 2024 Schedule: Video Game Live Streams & Showcases

E3 is dead and gone forever, but don’t be sad, folks! Summer has arrived, and the spirit of summer for the games industry will always be there. Wha...

post-07
Watch A Ton Of Utawarerumono ZAN 2 Gameplay Here

Publisher Aquaplus and developer Tamsoft just released new gameplay for its upcoming action game spin-off for its hit adult visual novel franchise Uta...

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comment(1)

  1. Samurai Maiden Sales Top 50,000 | KAKUCHOPUREI.COM

    December 12, 2022 at 10:32 pm

    […] If you want to see why people are paying the equivalent of US$60 for a samurai action game with schoolgirls, you can check out our video below. Or you can check out our review, which states that the game does get a tad cheap and repetitive despite the flashy combat.  […]

Tournament Tool Kit

Kakuchopurei Community

Popular Posts

post-17
Street Fighter 6: How To Find Akuma In World Tour Mode
post-17
Senua’s Saga: Hellblade 2 Review: An Odyssey Like Any Other?
post-17
Diablo 4 Season 4: The Best Builds Per Class To Get To Level 100 Fast!
post-17
Diablo 4 Season 4: Tempering & Masterworks Guide
post-17
V Rising Everything You Need To Know About Stygian Shards
post-17
Summer Of Gaming 2024 Schedule: Video Game Live Streams & Showcases
post-17
Vampire Survivors: Operation Guns Contra DLC – All New Evolutions & Unlocks
post-17
Vampire Survivors: The Best Builds For Each Stage
post-17
Hades 2 Guide: All Incantations And Effects At Hecate’s Cauldron
post-17
Hades 2: All Boons List & The Best Ones
post-17
Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes – 11 Tips To Get Ahead In This JRPG
post-17
Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes Review – Rally Forth
post-17
Final Fantasy VII Rebirth Queen’s Blood Guide: The Best Cards & Decks
post-17
Introducing The Kakuchopurei YouTube Membership Program!
post-17
Palworld: All The Guides You Need For 2024’s Surprise Survival Game Hit
post-17
Prince Of Persia: The Lost Crown Walkthrough & Guide
post-17
Delicious In Dungeon Starts The New Year Tastefully
post-17
The Games Of 2024: Our Picks & Highlights
post-17
Main Game: How To Watch Malaysia’s Best Video Game Show Created By Kakuchopurei & RTM
post-17
Marvel’s What If…? Crew Explains Why They Went 3D Over 2D & A Scrapped Episode That Was Too Close To GOTG 3
post-17
Hawkeye Episode 6 Finale Easter Eggs & Breakdown
post-17
We Talk To Hayden Christensen About Star Wars, Sequels, & Prequels
post-17
Sea Of Stars Might Get DLC Post-Launch
post-17
The Book Of Boba Fett Episode 7 Breakdown & Easter Eggs Explained