The first real social fighting game!
Shadow Fight combines the accessibility and social cooperation of a Facebook games with the game depth and competition of hardcore arcade games like Mortal Kombat or Tekken! Extraordinary fluidity and a wide variety of techniques, avatars, weapons, and martial arts magic ensures you can develop your own style as you battle friend & foe to become a warrior legend.
Forget all the fake Facebook fighting games, and play the only genuine arcade fighter on Facebook.
Do you have what it takes?
“Shadow Fight is a rarity among social network games in that it uses arcade style combat similar to traditional video games”
~Inside Social Games
Shadow Fight Review
Shadow Fight puts the "fight" in Facebook fighting games
Accuse me of hyperbole if you wish, but I haven't been so surprised by a fighting game since I first played
Street Fighter II on the SNES back in 1992. That's not because Nekki's
Shadow Fight
is particularly revolutionary (most of its charm springs from its
successful mimicry of other fighters), but because it's the first
Facebook fighting game I've played that actually lets you, well, fight.
That fact alone renders this martial arts-based fighter worthy of
attention, but its unexpected complexity and undeniable refinement
distinguish it as one of the finest Facebook games in recent months.
In
my experience, "fighting" in most Facebook games usually boils down to
watching a stationary avatar inflict damage on an opponent through
animations of explosions or slashing swords. Occasionally the artwork
makes up a bit for the lack of true interaction, but until now these
games have largely been a poor substitute for the titles they wish to
emulate. In some cases you don't even get to choose your moves.
Not so here. True to its name,
Shadow Fight centers on
stylized combat between two shadowy opponents that resemble ninja-style
marionettes as viewed from the other side of a Japanese shoji screen.
Beyond this comparatively minimalist presentation, however, lies a
remarkably deep combat experience with more than 35 available moves,
many of which can be unlocked by gaining "dan" after winning
tournaments. The matches themselves are won by being the first to win
two rounds (much like
Soul Calibur or
Street Fighter II),
and occasionally you'll get the chance to fight some bosses. Eventually
you can unlock weapons such as nunchaku and swords after you've amassed
enough coins (or forked out enough Facebook credits), and you can then
use these to fight in specialized tournaments. And if that's not enough,
an unfinished "fatalities" menu promises brutal finishing moves à la
Mortal Kombat in the near future.
Alas,
Shadow Fight
falls just short of a perfect score, but only because its battles
preserve the Facebook tradition of battling the AI rather than a
breathing opponent. That's not to say that it doesn't do a passable job
of fooling you. To initiate an unarmed match or a friendly duel with one
of your friends, for instance, you simply choose which one of your
friends you want to battle and the fight begins with your friend's photo
in the health bar. If you win, you can use the taunt of "revenge" as a
way of getting them to play, but you'll never truly get to match your
skills against theirs. The best you can hope for is to fight an AI
version of their avatar with the weapons and skills they've amassed
through leveling, and the same goes for the tournaments that pit you
against random Facebook profiles from around the world. Unless, that is,
you opt for the two-player battle. Unfortunately, this style of local
gameplay requires that both combatants share the same keyboard, so I
suspect you'll remember the ensuing squabbles over who has the most
shoulder room more than the gameplay itself.
Shadow Fight
is a joy to play regardless, and the AI is tolerably intelligent.
(Although I usually found that I could win games just by keeping my
opponent pinned). On a technical level, you can expect the standard
energy-based limits common to the platform, along with bonuses and
special unlockables that appear as you level. The gameplay is fluid, the
physics are believable, and the presentation exudes an aesthetic
elegance that its flashier cousins often lack.
Shadow Fight is a promising and pioneering title that likely heralds a fatality for the style of fighting games we've seen up to this point.
http://www.gamezebo.com/games/shadow-fight/review