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Ninja Gaiden (Arcade)
Ninja Gaiden |
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Also known as: Ninja Ryukenden (JP), Shadow Warriors (EU) This game has regional differences. |
This page is rather stubbly and could use some expansion. Are you a bad enough dude to rescue this article? |
A game overshadowed by its NES counterpart, mostly due to this game being a clunky beat em' up.
Contents
Regional Differences
The Japanese version is the later released version of the game. It has the following changes from the other versions:
Title Screen
Japan | US | Europe |
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Music
To do: What other differences are there between the overseas and Japanese OSTs? |
While the other background music tunes besides Stage 4 are the same as in the U.S. version, there are some minor additions to the tunes in the Japanese version.
Stage 4
The background music for Stage 4 was replaced in the Japanese version by another tune that resembles in some parts Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D Minor.
Ryuichi Nitta composed the original overseas Stage 4 theme, while Mikio Saito composed the new Stage 4 theme for the Japanese version.
Overseas | Japan |
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一口坂に陽が昇る The Sun Rises Over the Hills |
大自然のシンフォニー Symphony of Nature |
Round Clear
- In the Japanese version, after the stage clear jingle for each stage plays, a digitized voice shouts the game's title on the "stage clear" screen.
Area | Overseas | Japan | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Stage 1 | The track uses a different backing in the Japanese version. | ||
Stage 2 | |||
Stage 3 | |||
Stage 4 | |||
Stage 5 |
Game Over
The Japanese version has a voice speaking over the Game Over jingle.
Overseas | Japan |
---|---|
Miscellaneous
- The enemy characters cause normal damage during the final stage (a three-hit combo takes one square of the player's life bar), unlike the U.S. version, where at the last stage, the standard enemies and the mid-bosses just need to hit the player once to take off one or two life squares, and the last boss(s) can kill the player's character with just one attack.
Revisional Differences
Virtual Console/Arcade Archives
This game has been ported to the Nintendo Wii as a downloadable Virtual Console Arcade game as well as the PlayStation 4/Nintendo Switch as part of the Arcade Archives series. However, these releases contain the same changes found in Ninja Gaiden Black, including:
- The boss music in Stages 2 and 5 has been omitted from this version (due to the supposed similarity to Black Sabbath's "Iron Man"); in turn, the regular background music keeps playing even after the bosses appear (which would normally prompt the quick music switch).
- The use of the Star of David in the game's imagery (such as the rug at the end of Stage 4) was edited out.
The European version also uses the Ninja Gaiden title, due to the taboo on the word "ninja" having largely died out.
References
The Ninja Gaiden series
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Arcade | Ninja Gaiden |
NES | Ninja Gaiden (Prototype) • Ninja Gaiden Episode II: The Dark Sword of Chaos • Ninja Gaiden Episode III: The Ancient Ship of Doom |
Commodore 64 | Shadow Warriors |
Game Boy | Ninja Gaiden Shadow |
Sega Master System | Ninja Gaiden (Prototype) |
Sega Genesis | Ninja Gaiden |
SNES | Ninja Gaiden Trilogy |
Xbox | Ninja Gaiden • Ninja Gaiden Black |
PlayStation 3 | Ninja Gaiden Sigma • Ninja Gaiden Sigma 2 |
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