The story, unlike so many typical gaming struggles against possible world-ending doom, is a very light-hearted and cynical one. However, the good ones land pretty solidly and give the proceedings a flavour of that classic 90s attitude we love to see. Wang also unleashes plenty of one-liners which are, by his own admission, a bit hit-or-miss. There’s some great comic interplay between Wang and Zilla, with the two of them trading barbs as they reluctantly work together to try and save the world. However, his mentor-cum-rival Orochi Zilla enters the sad scene, demanding Wang pull himself together to save the world, handing him his twin sub-machine guns and sending him on his way. Shadow Warrior 3 starts off with the “retied” ninja and ex-hitman Wang in his underwear, looking dishevelled, ranting about how he accidentally set off a giant world-eating dragon currently in the process of destroying the world – whoopsie-doodle! He’s mourning the passing of his trickster God friend Hoji, cradling his mask. Apparently, a lot of people wanted some Wang, since the rebooted series of Shadow Warrior is now on its third, katana-wielding, blood-splattered entry. “Who wants some Wang?” asked an amusingly stereotyped FPS protagonist when the original Shadow Warrior was released back in 1997. Shadow Warrior 3 Review: A Third Helping of Wang
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