Inindo: Way of the Ninja

Inindo: Way of the Ninja
Developer(s) Koei
Publisher(s) Koei
Series Nobunaga's Ambition
Platform(s) PC8801SR, PC9801, MSX2, Sharp X68000, MS-DOS (Chinese), SNES, Windows 98
Release date(s)
  • JP: 1991
  • NA: March 1993[1]
  • EU: December 5, 2003
Genre(s) Role-playing
Mode(s) Single-player

Inindo: Way of the Ninja (伊忍道 打倒信長 or Inindou Datou Nobunaga, スーパー伊忍道 打倒信長 or Super Inindou Datou Nobunaga in its Super Famicom version) is a role-playing video game developed and published by Koei. Originally released for the PC8801SR, PC9801, MSX2 home computer and Sharp X68000, it was remade for the Super NES, which was also released in North America. The game is a fictional account of Japan's warring states period.

Plot

Set in 1582, the player assumes the role of an Iga ninja whose village has been destroyed by the conquest of the demonic warlord Oda Nobunaga. The ninja must travel across feudal Japan, enlisting the aid of numerous ninja, sages, hermits, ronin, samurai, wizards and other companions, in order to avenge his clan.

The game is a fictitious account of the end of Oda Nobunaga's campaign to conquer and unify all of Japan. The beginning of the game references the rebellion of Akechi Mitsuhide at Honnō-ji Temple, where the historical Nobunaga died by committing seppuku. The time of the game over point (the year 1601) would be just prior to the birth of the Tokugawa Shogunate under Tokugawa Ieyasu.

Gameplay

The actual game begins in the year 1582. If the player does not kill Nobunaga by the year 1601, the game is over.

Several hazardous dungeons stand in the path of victory, as well as a selection of optional dungeons which can be played in any order the player chooses. Encounters with monsters and outlaws occur randomly in dungeons and in the game's world map, during which the player characters and NPCs can move around the battlefield in turn-based fashion to attack, cast magic spells and use items.

To complete the game, the player must recruit NPCs in order to successfully survive dungeons and large scale battles. In order to recruit other characters, the player must build up a certain degree of trust by talking with them at Tea Houses and Inns. Not every character can be recruited: characters of rival clans will not join the player.

There are strategy and war simulation elements to game as well. By gaining the trust of a Japanese feudal lord, (by spying or committing acts of sabotage on competing daimyo), the player can join in the battle for the provinces that characterized the era. The outcome of these battles changes the lords' possession of individual provinces, which can alter the outcome of the game and aid or hinder the player's progress. Neighboring provinces to Nobunaga's must be conquered in order to advance to the final section of the game.

In the middle of the stories, the player follows either the "normal" path or the "magician" path, which is randomly selected after completing the first dungeon quest. Each path leads to different enemies during random encounters. For example, the "magician" path causes Western mythological monsters such as Hellhound or Marchosias to appear.

Due to the smaller resolution of the SNES, character names were shortened:

Japanese class name English class name
忍者 Ninja
僧侶 Sage
道士 Wizard
Warrior
伊賀忍者 Iga Ninja
甲賀忍者 Koga Ninja
伊賀女 Female Iga Ninja
甲賀女 Female Koga Ninja
風魔衆 Fuma Ninja
根来衆 Negoro Ninja
僧侶 Mendicant
僧兵 Sohei
山伏 Hermit
羅漢 Sage
道士 Mystic
方士 Magician
飯綱使い Sorcerer
武士 Samurai
浪人 Ronin
剣術家 Swordsman

Windows version

The Chinese version was ported to MS-DOS in 1993, playable in English OS. In 2003, the PC-9801 version of the game was ported to Windows 98, as part of Koei 25th Anniversary Pack Vol.1; standalone version was published in 2005. The Windows version runs the PC-9801 game in emulator; when saving, the emulator emulates drive switching operation. The port requires the use of mouse and the third scenario is inaccessible because of running in emulated environment.

Reception

GamePro review called Inindo "an impressive mix of adventure, fantasy, and epic military strategy", "a good RPG, featuring myth, magic, mayhem, and history" and "a great fantasy".[2]

See also

References

  1. "Super NES Games" (PDF). Nintendo. Retrieved 2012-07-25.
  2. GamePro 45 (April 1993), pages 70-71
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