It's like a sociopathic Lakitu who is determined to keep you looking at the nearest wall, pagoda or fountain until the enemies have murdered you and done strange things with the corpse. My major complaint is that the camera in this game is absolutely terrible, and it ruins the whole experience. I flat out hated the two hours it took me to give up on level 3. Four words that well describe my experience of Ninja Gaiden Sigma. I can thank Ninja Gaiden Sigma for that.ġh 44m ProgressAngry. Knowing I persevered when the game got tough and that I accomplished something I thought was "impossible" are proper life skills I can take from my living room and out into the real world. Pulling off a wicked combo, surviving a boss gauntlet with a sliver of health or completing a suicidal 120-enemy challenge have been some of my most satisfying experiences as a gamer. ![]() It's fast and addictive and nothing else feels quite as satisfying. For me, Ninja Gaiden is one of the best games I've ever played. If you believe games are a skill and something that requires mastery, Ninja Gaiden is for you. If you're the kind of gamer who strives to achieve and test your abilities, Ninja Gaiden is for you. If you're after a difficult, addicting, action-packed, boss-heavy game, Ninja Gaiden is for you. Ninja Gaiden Sigma master ninja mode complete. As the saying goes, if you can beat the first chapter on master ninja, you can beat the game. Once I was done with them, I fired up the first game again just to see if I could beat the first chapter. After that, I tried Ninja Gaiden Sigma 2 and Ninja Gaiden 3: Razor's Edge - both very poor games that didn't scratch the same itch the first one did. As a result, I canned the idea before it could fully germinate. Plus I was a bit burned out from completing the game four times in one month. It's not that I thought it would be impossible for me - in fact I now believed I could - rather I didn't think I could handle how the frustration and how aggravated it would make me feel. During very hard, I was quite convinced I wouldn't try master ninja mode. Eventually I was triumphant and cleared it (and by the time I reached the latter chapters, my frustrations lessened somewhat). I was tempted to throw in the towel but I didn't like the idea of quitting, so I grinned through my mounting anger at the game and pressed on. Despite being committed, I started to not enjoy the game around the military chapters. Very hard mode was actually a very frustrating experience. I just wanted to see how difficult the first chapter is (it's hard!), next thing I knew I was several chapters deep and committed. Something similar happened when it came to very hard. At the start it was just testing out the first few chapters but the addictive nature of NG kept me hooked and I completed it. I am not sure when I resurrected the idea but after playing through normal mode twice (where I feel like I had a better command of the fundamentals), I attempted hard. I did fancy that I could beat hard mode but after the first few levels on normal, I threw out that idea. ![]() The thought of playing the game on very hard let alone master didn't even enter my mind. When I first attempted Sigma on Normal, I went into the game thinking I would be playing the hardest game I'd ever played. It was always a "legendary" game, namely for it's difficulty. I had previously played the original Ninja Gaiden 04 back in the day on my original Xbox with a Duke controller. 45h 24m PlayedIt's a rare game to sustain my interest the way Ninja Gaiden Sigma sustained mine.
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