If you’ve been craving another dose of the unforgiving yet empowering combat that defined the Ninja Gaiden series, then Phantom Blade Zero’s hands-on demo at Summer Game Fest should have action fans buzzing. The upcoming “China Punk” brawler makes a pointed departure from the patient, defensive-minded approaches championed by From Software’s titles like Dark Souls. Instead, it’s shaping up as a spiritual successor to Ninja Gaiden’s relentless, hyper-offensive style of action.
From the outset, PBZ drops players directly into frantic battle scenarios as the dual-wielding protagonist Soul, armed with interchangeable short swords and a longer katana. Rather than methodically picking spots for counterattacks, victory hinges on an unwavering onslaught – constantly swapping between lighter and heavier weapon combos while precisely dodging or parrying intermittent enemy strikes.
“Approaching it more like a Souls game is absolute folly,” explains the preview. “Instead, Phantom Blade Zero rewards a hyper-aggressive playstyle in order to make those defensive options shine.”
This dedication to pure offensive action extends to enemy designs comprised of similarly skilled warriors who won’t be staggered by single blows. To overcome their ferocious resistance, players must overwhelm foes through superior combo prowess and ruthless weapon switching to manage Soul’s stamina strategically.
Complementing the frenetic gameplay is PBZ’s visually striking “China Punk” aesthetic fusing classical Chinese mythology and architecture with modern creative flair. Environmental details like towering cliffside forts, precarious footholds, and projectile weapon options like a “big handheld dragon mouth laser” showcase the vibrant mythological inspirations.
The hands-on demo culminated in an epic boss showdown against the wildly aggressive Huangxing, the Sunken Pillar of Kunlun. With unpredictable instant-kill attacks and crushing power, he represents the true test of players’ skills at blending seamless offense and defense.
“Huangxing presents the hardest battle of the demo by being aggressive, having wildly damaging attacks, and being hard to predict,” the preview warns.
While the demo sections lacked connective world design to properly showcase level layouts, the core combat exhibited immense potential to delight hardcore action enthusiasts. If developer S-Game can maintain this promising mix of uncompromising challenge and empowering offensive depth, Phantom Blade Zero could stand tall among the most intense and rewarding exemplars of the action genre.
Get those blade arms stretching, because when PBZ launches, it seems casual restraint and patience will be of little use against this “China Punk” world’s chaotic dangers. The key to victory, much like Ninja Gaiden before it, may simply be to never stop attacking.