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Itagaki Talks Ninja Gaiden Difficulty, Sequel, DOA

Thanks to Kikizo for its interview with Tecmo's Tomonobu Itagaki regarding "Ninja Gaiden 2, Code Chronus, Dead or Alive Ultimate, DOA4 and PSP, [and] Nintendo DS development", conducted at the E3 Expo in Los Angeles. Itagaki addresses the complaints of some about Ninja Gaiden's extreme difficulty, posturing: "It was done intentionally of course. The testers who tested this game went nuts. At first it was easier, but when the testers said 'this is too difficult', I made it even more difficult", before mentioning that a Ninja Gaiden 2 is planned, and "the concept will not change", but "it will be after [development of] Dead or Alive 4", which in turn will be produced after the nearly completed Dead Or Alive Ultimate, the Xbox Live online-enabled title which "takes the first two Dead or Alive titles, adds all new environments, a novel online setup, a higher degree of interactivity in its levels, new movies, new costumes, and more."

16 of 67 comments (clear)

  1. Good game by redune45 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I love Ninja Gaiden
    I just wish that I had the patience to put up with the riculous difficulty.
    I've even managed to destroy one of my controllers in frustration. I just don't see why he couldn't have put an easy or normal option in the game, let us choose how hard we want it to be.

    --
    redune.com: The World 3.2 Megapixels at a time
    1. Re:Good game by Liquidrage · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm glad you mentioned the controller.
      I'm 29. I hadn't thrown a controller since Alex Kidd in Miracle World back in the Sega Master System days.
      Yet, I threw it once playing Ninja Gaiden on the X-Box.

      I'm OK with them not having the option to make it easier though. It was a throw back game (pun is optional). It force me to get good at the game. If you've made it through most of the game, go back and start over and it's actually not that hard. It's just instead of bring a modern "just play through, little skill required" like most games, it makes you get good. And I respect that.

    2. Re:Good game by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I'm OK with them not having the option to make it easier though. It was a throw back game (pun is optional). It force me to get good at the game. If you've made it through most of the game, go back and start over and it's actually not that hard. It's just instead of bring a modern "just play through, little skill required" like most games, it makes you get good. And I respect that.

      Exactly! Some people don't realize that most games today are easy. Now, there's nothing wrong with it -- I loved Prince of Persia even though it poses almost no challenge (through enemies and combat, at least). But what's wrong with targeting a game, for once, at people who will want to invest a lot of time to get really good at it, instead of at Mr. Casual Gamer who wants there to be essentially no learning curve? There are already plenty of games that cater to that crowd. I mean, doesn't anyone remember the original Ninja Gaiden games on the NES? They were tough!

      If you don't like Ninja Gaiden because it's too difficult, then don't play it. Or shake your fist at the screen and give that boss another try. But don't demand that all games be developed with a built-in no-challenge mode.

  2. Boasting? by Andy+Smith · · Score: 3, Insightful
    It was done intentionally of course. The testers who tested this game went nuts. At first it was easier, but when the testers said 'this is too difficult', I made it even more difficult
    Interesting concept. Also known as: Bad management

    Imagine the quote from a film company: We played the movie to test audiences and they said they really hated one character, so we put some of that character's deleted scenes back in.

    Or how about: Here at Slashdot we get a lot of complaints about factual errors and duplicate stories. Well would ya just look at the place now...
    1. Re:Boasting? by KDR_11k · · Score: 4, Funny

      We played the movie to test audiences and they said they really hated one character, so we put some of that character's deleted scenes back in.

      Star Wars Episode 1?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    2. Re:Boasting? by illuminata · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It wasn't a matter of bad management. Itagaki knew what market he was aiming Ninja Gaiden for. Gamers shouldn't act like he made a bad decision just because the game isn't for them. Ninja Gaiden is meant for good players who want a challenge. If it's too hard for you, there's nothing wrong with playing another game.

      Here's another example from the film world. David Mamet gives a test screening for his new film, but a decent portion of the audience complains because they don't understand the dialogue between characters. So, while doing the final edit, David sticks a bunch more of that dialogue into the movie because he knows that his fans will eat it up.

      --


      Until Slashdot fixes the funny modifier, use insightful or interesting. The poster knows your intentions.
    3. Re:Boasting? by cgenman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Interesting concept. Also known as: Bad management

      Imagine the quote from a film company: We played the movie to test audiences and they said they really hated one character, so we put some of that character's deleted scenes back in.


      It could very well be that the testers became complacent by the easier sections of the game. When the difficulty ramped up as high as Team Ninja wanted the testers felt the change and felt that it was too sudden / too strong. To smooth out the perception of disjoint in the difficulty curve, Team Ninja could have either made the hard sections easier, or made the easy sections harder. They chose the latter.

      Considering all of the press that this game has recieved, it was the right choice. Compare this outing to the recent update of Strider... Which was truer to the source material? Which was the better game?

      Imagine this quote from a film company: We played Lost Highway to test audiences and they said they didn't it, so we're simplifying the storyline and making things clearer. Sometimes it's best not to do what your audience wants.

  3. Ninja Gaiden is SUPPOSED to be hard! by Dark+Nexus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I suspect many fans of the original NES Ninja Gaiden games, like myself, would have been annoyed if it HADN'T been more difficult than most games these days.

    The original is one of my favourite NES games of all time, even though I was never able to finish it. Just too hard. It wasn't uncommon to have trouble getting past the first area of the first world if you were new to the game.

    Gamers now are spoiled by excessive (and therefore forgiving of dying) save points, and difficulty through gimmics. Once you figure out the gimmic, it tends to get a LOT easier. It's nice to see a game that's just HARD.

    --
    Dark Nexus
    "Sanity is calming, but madness is more interesting."
    1. Re:Ninja Gaiden is SUPPOSED to be hard! by MilenCent · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Credential establishment:

      I played a lot of those old NES games. I've beaten Castlevania without continuing. Gone through Mario 2 -the whole game, no warping- without losing a life. I've been to the secret levels in Mario Lost Levels you can only get to if you don't warp. I've finished Zelda (first quest at least) with a wooden sword and no ring, and almost finished the second that way, too. I've beaten Golgo 13, Rygar in 3 hours starting from first picking up the game, Metroid without maps fast enough to get the legendary "bikini" ending, and over 300 hundred other games.

      Mario Sunshine's void levels are my favorite parts of that game. I've beaten bloody Athena, for crying out loud.

      Main argument:

      So please understand than when I say that Ninja Gaiden is too damn hard, that I know what I'm talking about. It's not that I didn't finish both of the NJ games I played (1 and 2), it's that I didn't enjoy the experience. Back then I played video games fairly obsessively. I would not have the patience for a Ninja Gaiden today, because I have better respect for the limits of my free time.

      The original Castlevania is a game that's very similar to NES Ninja Gaiden in many ways, but better in most respects. NJ's primary contributions to the genre are cinema scenes (which were either nonexistant or very rare beforehand) and wall-jumping, which was very frustrating to deal with.

      It's not that games aren't easier these days than they were -- they are. But they're also in 3D, which is an intrinsically more difficult environment to operate in. And if video games, good ones, are ever going to truly break into the mainstream, we've got to pay greater attention to balanced difficulty.

      Diatribe: complete!

    2. Re:Ninja Gaiden is SUPPOSED to be hard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Apparently you played those games with a very different mindset than you played NG today. I have never been bothered to play through even Mario of those games you listed. Yet I still managed to play through NG. Actually I'd even go out on a limb and say that once you get the feeling of the game it's not that too hard at all. (Although I did replay some parts more than 3 times before I got past them.)

      While the game sure is hard the controls are really tight and I never got the feeling that the controls lagged. (Which would be fatal in a game like NG.) Once I learned the moves I could also pull off long combos and acrobatics with ease.

      Regarding the difficulty I though that the game actually was well balanced. In each part of the game you go up against perhaps 3-4 different opponent types. Typically one of these is significantly easier than the other and one is harder. Each new level the easiest is swapped for a new hardest type which makes for a gradual escalation of difficulty.

      Now it sure isn't a game that anyone can play. Many people will be better served with standard games. But I really prefer to play games which provide a challanging (but fair and well controlled) experience than an easy game with sloppy controls.

      Case in point. After NG I played through Beyond Good and Evil. A very nice game by all accounts but the fighting interface is very mainstream. Basically you point the stick in a direction and press the button. I actually though that the final boss in BGE was harder than in NG because by the time I got to the final boss in NG I *owned* the controls. In BGE the controls are sloppy and so I never really got used to them. (They are a bit laggy and it's unnecessarily hard to control combat movements.)

      Finally I will just say that today the majority of games are geared to mainstream. If people think NG is too hard then play another game instead. If you practice at it you'll get good enough to kick arse too, but it will feel like an accomplishment, because it is. I really want more games like this, because they tend to give me much more satisfaction.

  4. People whine too much about NG by Inexile2002 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was hard, but it wasn't impossible. Once I learned how to actually play, I finished the game in around a week and a half. Sure, it was hard at first, and fighting the second boss on horseback, or the first time you fight the fiend chick were freaking crazy. But it's just a steep learning curve. Once I finished it, it unlocks a third "Very Hard" option and a secret costume. Pure bliss.

    There is a market for really hard games, and if you don't want to play them - don't. But personally, it would have pissed me off to have finished Ninja Gaiden in 6 to 7 hours and it would have pissed me off if the same strategies worked against every enemy. What I loved about that game what that you had to learn how to actually fight within the context of that game. You had to learn to exploit an enemy's weaknesses, you had to learn how to use the terrain to your advantage, when to use your Ninpo and when to save it. In the end, it was one of the best games I ever played - if it had been easier... it would have just been eye candy. People who want easy games should buy easy games.

  5. hum by sonatinas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The common complaint agaisnt Ninja Gaiden is its difficulty. I really do not see the difficulity. I believe gamers might find it difficult is because they do not use useful tactics to beat the enemies. Mashing buttons and just killing everything that moves is not a useful tactic. If you actually use counters and the soul charge move so you can kill enemies in chains( the move the first boss explains to you) you should not have that much of a problem. Also, learning how to use the weapons and when to use them. Also, if u upgrade your wooden sword to the unlabored flawlessness, the game is even easier.

    THe key to tackling games is to actully think about what u are doing and dont button mash and let the stylish moves make you think u have to do them. Espically in Ninja Gaiden, u can use about 5 moves and finish the game.

  6. Re:It wasn't the game itself... by Dark+Nexus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You know what? The game was made more for the fans of the originals than the fans of the genre in general, otherwise it would have been called something else instead of dragging out a name that people who weren't fans of the original wouldn't care about. Not making it require high amounts of skill to get through would have annoyed many of that target audience, and I know THAT for a fact. The Ninja Gaiden series has NEVER been easy, and was never meant for the casual gamer.

    --
    Dark Nexus
    "Sanity is calming, but madness is more interesting."
  7. People seem to miss the point by Tuvai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A truly challenging game is hard to come by these days, for every Ninja Gaiden, Viewtiful Joe and F-Zero GX, there are 2 dozen games that bow to eye candy and plot development over actual difficulty.
    Sadly this is a curse that has been steadily gaining momentum since the PlayStation era and throughout, where the craftsmenship of demanding perfection/reactions within a 2D environment were sacrificed at the alter of style over substance. Itagaki needs to be lauded for his attidude, not criticised.

  8. Itagaki is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Having this interview translated by what I assume was a marketing flack probably evened out some of his lunacy. From the times I've seen him at events and the interviews I've read, it seems that he always wears a lizard skin jacket, sunglasses, jeans and boots. He's quite tall for a Japanese guy - over 6 feet with the boots on, so he has a certain impact. But that's just clothes - anyone can dress like a rockstar.

    It's the way he interacts with people and the things he says when there's no minder around that lets you know he's totally insane. Check out Tim Roberts' account of meeting him at E3 http://www.livejournal.com/users/108/42763.html, or the Tokyopia interview.

    Mind you, when I say that he's crazy, that's at least half-positive. He seems to pretty much do what he wants, and he's been successful enough that obviously Tecmo is happy to let him have his way with things. That means that his games have been designed with only one purpose in mind: making him happy. That's miles better than a crappy movie-license game, or some other forgettable game that's been designed by committee. Ninja Gaiden may be too hard, but it's certainly original - we could use more lunatics like Itagaki.

  9. Re:It wasn't the game itself... by DeadScreenSky · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sorry, but I think it should be the goal of someone who creates a game to make it as much fun for everyone interested in that particular genre as possible.

    Yeah, except going the lowest-common denominator route can turn off a huge part of your potential audience. I enjoyed Ninja Gaiden partially because it was challenging (though not as hard as many people complain - think tactical, gamers!). If it was easier I wouldn't have enjoyed it so much, and I am far from alone.

    And you can't ignore the fact (even though you attempt to) that Team Ninja made the game pretty fair in terms of difficulty. There are what, only two parts of the game with 'instant kill pits', done largely for good game design reasons (like under the monastery - you can't just let the player jump all the way down, but you don't want the player taking falling damage for the other 99% of the game)? Compare that to a game like the Shinobi remake or your average platformer (hell, even classic games like Mario64!), which are filled with that kind of 'one mistake=death' annoyance. NG also allows you to build up as much money as you want (via various bat areas), so you can buy as much health potions as your skill level requires. Try playing something like Genma Onimusha, which has similar mechanics (lots of respawning enemies), a camera that is literally ten times or so worse, and a complete inability to buy health potions. You have to beat the game with what the designers give you - get to the last boss without enough potions, too bad. May as well restart. Even the 'bad camera' you talk about is pretty damn good, because it is paired with the ability to block 95+% of attacks with the touch of a button, and all enemies make noises so you know when an attack is coming even if it isn't visible (another thing Genma Onimusha screws up). Ninja Gaiden isn't easy, and maybe some parts could be tightened up a little or smoothed out, but it is intensely fair.

    If you just started playing games recently (say the PSX era), or if you predominently play all of the recent (and easy) Nintendo games, Ninja Gaiden just probably isn't for you. There's nothing wrong with people like Itagaki making games for the millions of old school (and nowadays mostly Western) gamers that are so often ignored by most other developers. We really, really appreciate it, and the game's sales reflect that.

    --
    There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion. -- Francis Bacon