Katana Zero

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Katana Zero
Katana Zero pre-release Steam header.jpg
Developer(s)Askiisoft
Publisher(s)Devolver Digital
Programmer(s)Justin Stander
EngineGameMaker Studio 2
Platform(s)
Release Windows, macOS, Switch
  • WW: April 18, 2019
Xbox One
  • WW: October 15, 2020
Genre(s)Action, platform
Mode(s)Single-player

Katana Zero is a 2D action platform video game developed by Askiisoft and published by Devolver Digital for Microsoft Windows, macOS and Nintendo Switch in 2019. The game was also released on Xbox One on October 15, 2020 with a free DLC planned for 2021.

Gameplay[]

Katana Zero includes no health bar and being hit will result in instant death.[1] The player character navigates side-scrolling levels, attempting to kill all enemies in that level using his blade or environmental traps.[1] The player character can deflect bullets with his slash, slow time with a meter that slowly refills, and dodge attacks using rolls.[2] The game also features a real-time conversation system that the player can interrupt.[1]

Plot[]

Katana Zero takes place in the dystopic, neo-noir metropolis of New Mecca. The game's plot is heavily affected by an invasion of an unnamed Asiatic nation, referred to as the "Cromag War," New Mecca's faction is implied to have lost the ensuing conflict.

The player controls a katana-wielding assassin called Subject Zero, as he completes various assassination contracts given to him by his psychiatrist, who also supplies him with ‘Chronos’, a drug that allows him to slow down time and predict the future.[1]

Throughout the game, Zero experiences recurring nightmares of a child in a primitive hut; a man wearing a labcoat bursts into the hut and warns the child to hide moments before being shot dead by the menacing silhouette of a soldier. The child is heavily implied to be a young Zero. Zero is also repeatedly visited by Comedy and Tragedy, two men wearing lab coats and theater masks, who taunt him about impending disaster in his future.[1]

The game begins in media res, as Zero is sent to extract a kidnapped scientist from a warehouse. The scientist is found but immediately killed by V, a Russian mobster, who escapes. His mission failed, Zero visits his psychiatrist to receive his daily Chronos injection and a dossier on his next target, Josh Rose. Zero fights his way to Rose, who commits suicide. On his way home, Zero befriends a young girl living next door to his apartment.

Next, Zero is sent to kill DJ Electrohead, a disc jockey involved in the drug trade, and is explicitly warned not to speak to him. Zero infiltrates his nightclub and can either kill Electrohead or listen to him confess to using Chronos before he is shot dead by an unseen sniper. The media begins to refer to Zero's killing sprees as being the work of a serial killer known as The Dragon.

Zero's fourth target is Fa Yuan, a prison inmate. Upon arriving, Zero finds the prison staff massacred and his target already dead. SWAT officers arrive and storm the cellblock as Zero escapes. At his apartment, the Girl gives him a videotape she claims V left for him, containing a recording of V torturing and killing Zero's other neighbors. Zero finds his psychiatrist's office closed the next morning and is picked up by V in a limousine on his way back. V offers to partner with Zero, who flatly refuses and is thrown out of the limo. He tracks V to an abandoned movie studio and fights through various film sets to reach him. Their fight is interrupted by Snow, a swordswoman working with V, who threatens Zero and leaves with V.

Beginning to experience vivid hallucinations, Zero is assigned to kill Al-Qasim, a wealthy industrialist. Zero comes upon V and his men already storming Al-Qasim's mansion and is captured. When Zero uses precognition to mock him, V shoots Al-Qasim and leaves Zero to be killed by his henchman, Mr. Kissyface. Zero kills Kissyface and chases V and his men down the highway on motorcycles. Before Zero can kill him, V is dismembered and then abducted by another swordsman, who displays similar abilities to Zero's. Before Zero flees, the swordsman claims that he is The Dragon.

Zero suffers further hallucinations of a now-dismembered V, who claims that his visions are the result of Chronos withdrawal—without it, he will be trapped in time, unable to die. Zero's psychiatrist sends him to a Chinatown casino to hunt down The Dragon. Within the Casino, Zero encounters The Dragon, as well as Headhunter, another Chronos user. Zero duels Headhunter while The Dragon flees the scene; the duel ends in a draw, and Headhunter escapes. While leaving, Zero acquires a tape containing the Prison's security footage from the night of Fa Yuan's murder. The tape footage shows The Dragon storming the prison and interrogating Fa Yuan, who tells him about Leon von Alvensleben, the creator of Chronos.[3]

After finding the psychiatric office closed, Zero is directed to a slaughterhouse by an unknown caller. The slaughterhouse proves to be a front for a training facility for 'NULLs', Chronos-enhanced super soldiers used by New Mecca in the Cromag war. While progressing through the facility, Zero is addressed by Alvensleben, who observes and speaks to him through a series of monitors throughout the facility. After determining Zero was once an elite Gamma NULL, Alvensleben reveals the project was a failure, and its subjects marked for death. Realizing that the footage of the scientist is a recording made years ago, Zero thaws the real Alvensleben from cryostasis, killing him.

Zero locates and confronts the Psychiatrist, who confirms that Zero was a NULL soldier, and that his targets have all been related to Chronos. He then sends Zero to destroy the contents of Al-Qasim's safe room in an underground bunker. At the bottom, he finds Headhunter guarding the vault. Headhunter confirms that she is also a NULL, explaining that she is entering Chronos withdrawal, and that Al-Qasim employed her as an assassin in exchange for a supply of the drug. Zero kills her and enters the vault, where he finds a woman and children cowering in fear. Unable to bring himself to kill them, he abandons his contract.

Zero discovers his psychiatrist preparing to flee the city, brutally beats him to death, and injects himself with a massive dose of Chronos. Alternatively, if Zero interrupts the Psychiatrist constantly during conversations and deliberately disobeys his directives during missions, the Psychiatrist becomes enraged and injects himself with an unknown drug, transforming into a monstrosity. Zero duels the monstrosity and kills him. Upon Zero's victory, the scene immediately cuts to him calmly seated in the office, the Psychiatrist's human self dead by a stab to the head rather than by being beaten to death. Zero searches the Psychiatrist's belongings and leaves without visibly injecting himself with Chronos.

Returning to his apartment, he finds it burglarized, the young girl gone, and a cryptic note left behind. The landlady states that no children lived in the building. When questioned, Zero runs, and the police give chase.

Zero's recurring nightmare is replayed, minus the distortion. Zero is revealed to have been the NULL soldier responsible for shooting the Scientist, rather than the child who hid. Having completed his objective, Zero exits the scene of the nightmare and walks over to stand next to The Dragon, who is shown to have been Zero's comrade in arms during the Cromag War.

In a mid-credits scene, Snow informs her superior of V's death at the hands of The Dragon, while The Dragon contemplates a board of evidence at a safe house. In a post-credits scene, Comedy and Tragedy taunt the little girl as she cowers in fear.

Development and release[]

The game was programmed by Justin Stander,[1] while the soundtrack is synthwave and is composed by LudoWic and Bill Kiley.[4] Development was announced "100% complete" by February 27, 2019.[5] The game was developed using GameMaker Studio 2 and took 6 years to complete.[6]

The game was released on 18 April 2019.[7] In Australia, Katana Zero was rated adult-only in May 2019.[citation needed][8]

Reception[]

The game was well received in previews by several gaming news outlets. In 2016, Nick Robinson of Polygon called it "one of the most impressive games we saw at PAX Prime last year".[1] Brenna Hiller of VG247 called the game "far too stylish" and complimented the fact that the game's screen shake could be turned down.[4] Mike Williams of USgamer called the game "stylish as hell" and "one of [his] favorite upcoming games".[2]

The game has a score of 83 on Metacritic, indicating generally favorable reviews.[9][10]

The Nintendo Switch version reached 100,000 copies sold within one week of its release.[17]

Awards[]

Year Award Category Result Ref
2019 2019 SXSW Gaming Awards Gamer's Voice: Video Game Nominated [18]
The Game Awards 2019 Best Independent Game Nominated [19]
2020 NAVGTR Awards Game, Original Adventure Nominated [20]
Independent Games Festival Awards Excellence in Design Nominated [21]
2020 SXSW Gaming Awards Most Promising New Intellectual Property Nominated [22]
16th British Academy Games Awards Debut Game Nominated [23]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Robinson, Nick (2016-01-14), Watch us play Katana Zero: a gorgeous, stylish neo-noir Hotline Miami-like, retrieved 2017-07-03
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Williams, Mike. "Katana Zero is Still Stylish as Hell". USgamer. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  3. ^ Justin Stander [@askiisoft] (1 May 2019). "The laser girl's name is Headhunter, and she is not related to the psychiatrist" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Everyone's drooling over this gorgeous trailer for super-stylish indie Katana Zero". VG247.com. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  5. ^ Justin (27 February 2019). "Katana ZERO development is 100% complete with some exciting news coming mid March, including console plans and an exact launch date reveal! While it includes a two week delay, the news will fulfill one of your biggest requests...pic.twitter.com/CamoZz4M8s".
  6. ^ "Justin on Twitter: "@treefroggo @katana_zero 6 years, and game maker studio 2."". Twitter. 24 April 2019. Retrieved 23 March 2020.
  7. ^ "Katana ZERO launches for Switch, PC on April 18". 20 March 2019.
  8. ^ "Katana Zero's Ban Overturned, Receives R18+ Rating". Kotaku Australia. 2019-05-16. Retrieved 2021-09-06.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b "Katana ZERO for Switch Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b "Katana ZERO for PC Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  11. ^ Juba, Joe (April 18, 2019). "Katana Zero". Game Informer. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  12. ^ Santa Maria, Alex (April 18, 2019). "Katana Zero Review | Tale of a stumbling samurai". Game Revolution. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  13. ^ Barbosa, Alessandro (April 18, 2019). "Katana Zero Review - Slow-Motion Samurai". GameSpot. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  14. ^ Saltzman, Mitchell (April 18, 2019). "Katana Zero Review". IGN. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  15. ^ Vogel, Mitch (April 18, 2019). "Katana ZERO Review". Nintendo Life. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  16. ^ Williams, Mike (April 18, 2019). "Katana Zero Review". USgamer. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  17. ^ Doolan, Liam (April 26, 2019). "Katana Zero Sold More Than 100,000 Copies In Its First Week". Nintendo Life. Retrieved April 26, 2019.
  18. ^ Trent, Logan (January 29, 2019). "Announcing the 2019 SXSW Gamer's Voice Award Nominees!". South by Southwest. Archived from the original on April 12, 2019. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  19. ^ Winslow, Jeremy (November 19, 2019). "The Game Awards 2019 Nominees Full List". GameSpot. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  20. ^ "2019 Nominees". National Academy of Video Game Trade Reviewers. January 13, 2020. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  21. ^ "Mutazione, Eliza, Untitled Goose Game Are Some of the Key Nominees for the 22nd Annual Independent Games Festival". GlobeNewswire. January 7, 2020. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
  22. ^ Grayshadow (February 17, 2020). "2020 SXSW Gaming Awards Nominees Revealed". NoobFeed. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  23. ^ Stuart, Keith (March 3, 2020). "Death Stranding and Control dominate Bafta games awards nominations". The Guardian. Retrieved March 4, 2020.

External links[]

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