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Shaman King: Master of Spirits

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Shaman King: Master of Spirits
Shaman King Master of Spirits cover
Developer(s)KCEJ
Publisher(s)Konami
Platform(s)Game Boy Advance
Release
  • NA: November 9, 2004
  • EU: September 16, 2005
Genre(s)Platform-adventure (Metroidvania)[1]
Mode(s)Single player

Shaman King: Master of Spirits is a Metroidvania video game developed by Konami Computer Entertainment Japan and published by Konami. This is the first Shaman King game that was developed for the Game Boy Advance in America. It was developed to accompany the English dub by 4kids Entertainment.

Story

On his quest to advance in the Shaman Tournament and defeat Hao, Yoh and his friends run into a man named Magister, who plans on resurrecting the demon king Mephias. With the help of his friends and their Guardian Ghosts, Yoh must stop Magister at all costs.

General Information

Shaman King: Master of Spirits, much like the anime and manga it is based on, is centered on Yoh Asakura and his battles to become Shaman King.

The story within the game plays like a "Side story", referring to elements within the story of both the manga and anime while not conforming to any particular continuity. In it, Yoh's goal is to stop the Guardian of Demons from being resurrected by a gang of rogue shaman.

The game itself, while not having fatal flaws, does have its critics in response to its simplicity and overuse of map exploration, a surprising lack and simplicity in the move set for Yoh and the lack of health pickups in the areas (Health can only be recovered by spending money to buy health items, finding/receiving them through spirit ability or making use of spirits with healing potential - Tokageroh, Mash and the Spirit of Fire).

References

  1. ^ Schipper, Paul (March 8, 2014). "RETRO REVIEW: Shaman King: Master of Spirits". Operation Rainfall. Retrieved July 12, 2016. By this point some of you are probably making the connection that this is a Konami game and resembles the "Metroidvania" format that most Castlevania games of that time period were embracing. It's true, and it's obviously no coincidence.