Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style

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Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style
Wu-Tang - Shaolin Style Coverart.png
North American cover art
Developer(s)Paradox Development
Publisher(s)Activision
Success (JPN)
Producer(s)Kevin Mulhall
Oliver "Power" Grant
Duane Grant
Designer(s)Benjamin Kutcher
Programmer(s)Peter Jefferies
Artist(s)Paul Interrante
Writer(s)Adam Goldberg (story)
Jay Halderman
Platform(s)PlayStation
Release
  • NA: November 30, 1999
  • PAL: 1999
  • JP: June 29, 2000
Genre(s)Fighting
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style, released as Wu-Tang: Taste the Pain in PAL regions, is fighting game for the PlayStation. The basis for the game's story and setting is the real-life hip hop group Wu-Tang Clan, featuring characters based on their stage personas and the martial arts themes of their music. Some members of the group also provide voiceover work and made vocal and production contributions to the music.

Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style uses a unique game engine created by Paradox Development, originally made for their unreleased PlayStation title Thrill Kill. That game was noteworthy for allowing up to four players to fight simultaneously, a feature heavily utilized in Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style.

Due to the game's graphic depictions of blood and violence, a special code printed on the instruction manual had to be entered within the game to see the full, uncensored action.

Story[]

The story is mostly told through full motion video (FMV) sequences and tells the tale of a group of martial artists studying under Master Xin, the last practitioner of the ancient kung-fu discipline of Wu-Tang. The first FMV sequence shows a small army of warriors practicing martial arts in a Chinese open-air kwoon under the watchful eye of Mong Zhu. He declares his plans to discover the secrets of Wu-Tang from Master Xin, who he has discovered to be hiding out on Staten Island in New York, which will presumably give him the power to take over the world. Soon after this, Master Xin is captured by Mong Zhu's goons and the Wu-Tang Clan vow to track Zhu down and rescue their master.

The clan fight their way through Mong Zhu's various minions in an effort to rescue their master, leading them through Staten Island, mainland New York and finally China. During a torture session, Mong Zhu discovers the secrets of Wu-Tang are tattooed on Xin's chest. Mong Zhu cuts the skin with the tattoo from Xin's chest, killing Xin in the process and giving Zhu access to the secrets of the Wu-Tang.

When the clan arrive, they take down Mong Zhu and the last of his henchmen. Mong Zhu activates a gas bomb in a last-ditch attempt to take the clan with him. Realizing that his talisman is the same as the bomb Mong Zhu just used, RZA activates his own gas bomb and shoves it in Mong Zhu's mouth. While the rest of the clan open the portcullis blocking their escape, RZA grabs a lamp from the ceiling of the dojo. The clan escape outside, whereupon an explosion destroys the entire building. The game ends with Master Xin's spirit watching down over the clan and smiling.

Gameplay[]

The game runs off the Thrill Kill engine. It is a tournament-style fighting game with matches ranging between two and four fighters at once, with either every fighter for themselves or in 2-on-2 or 1-on-3 team matches (in the single-player game modes the player is regularly faced with multiple opponents and outnumbered in matches). Stylized versions of all nine members of the real-life Wu-Tang Clan appear as characters in the game, with a number of fictional fighters included in the character roster ranging from human martial artists to powerful godlike beings with magical powers (which typically serve as the game's "bosses").

Combat[]

The combat is similar to many 3D fighting games: two punch buttons, two kick buttons, a block button, and a crouch button. The game differs by the inclusion of "lives" which are lost when the player's health bar reaches zero. When this happens, the player respawns and a life is subtracted. Should the player be killed with only one life left, their character will not respawn and they will lose the match (in team games, all the members of a team must die for victory to occur).

The player has a power-up meter that fills when the player scores or receives hits. When full, the power-up can be activated by pressing all four face buttons at once. Once this is activated, the player's moves are significantly more powerful while the power-up meter drains. Once the meter is fully drained, the effect wears off. Players are free to refill this meter as often as they can during the course of a match.[citation needed]

Finishing moves[]

Defeating the last opponent in a match will result in a fatality being performed on them in a similar vein to the Mortal Kombat series' Fatality. Each character has five different fatalities which correspond to the four face buttons on the controller, plus one corresponding to the character's throw move. Thus, the fatality performed depends on the last moved performed. Each character only starts with one available finishing move, and must unlock the additional four by playing through the story mode.

The 36 Chambers[]

Throughout the course of the game's Story Mode the player advances through a series of challenges, called the 36 Chambers - a reference to both the real-life rap group's debut album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) and to the kung fu film The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. These challenges range from visiting certain locations to performing combos of a certain length. Rewards for completing these include character concept art, new game modes, characters, and fatalities. Given that some of the chambers require pulling off a certain fatality, the player may be forced to complete a certain goal before proceeding to the next one. Also, the player cannot face the last opponent (and therefore complete Story Mode) until they have first cleared 35 chambers - the 36th being awarded for defeating Mong Zhu himself.

Reception[]

Praise for the game came from GamePro (4/5), Absolute PlayStation (90%),[1] and IGN (8/10),[2] while it received a much colder reception from GameSpot (5.2),[3] Electronic Gaming Monthly (4.5),[citation needed] and Game Fan (63%).[citation needed] Complaints were focused on the game's poor frame rate, unresponsive controls, and steep difficulty curve of the story mode, while the game's supporters lauded the then-innovative four-player matches, in-depth story mode, and creative use of the Wu-Tang Clan license for the characters, music, and tone.[citation needed]

Jim Preston reviewed the PlayStation version of the game for Next Generation, rating it three stars out of five, and stated that "A decent fighting engine, a great soundtrack, and a little ultra-violence are sewn up into a very respectable game."[4]

Special Edition "W" Controller[]

Activision released a special edition set of the game, including a controller in the shape of the characteristic Wu-Tang "W". It featured all of the buttons of the original PlayStation controller, but had neither the vibration capabilities nor the analog sticks of the DualShock. Due to its unique shape it was very difficult to use, making it more of a collector's display piece than a functional control device.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ "Wu Tang Review".at Absolute Playstation
  2. ^ "Wu Tang Review". Archived from the original on January 23, 2012.at IGN
  3. ^ "Wu Tang Review". Archived from the original on 2007-06-26.at GameSpot
  4. ^ Preston, Jim (February 2000). "Finals". Next Generation. Vol. 3 no. 2. Imagine Media. p. 97.
  5. ^ http://qualityctrl.com/home/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/wu-controller.jpg
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