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Black Myth: Wukong Review
2026.02.28 02:27
One of the best things about indie games is that they allow studios to bring all of their whacky and weird ideas to the table, and develop games that might otherwise have caused a lot of raised eyebrows or confused expressions when the concepts are seen on paper. For example, the notion of playing as a stray cat that explores a city populated by robots sounds bizarre, but the glimpses players have been shown of Stray so far paint a compelling and beautifully realized picture . Similarly, the ability to play a game where a bear runs a B&B in the woods in Bear and Breakfast or to control anthropomorphic dinosaur characters who are about to graduate in Goodbye Volcano High may seem like fever dreams, but there's undeniable genius in these concepts if studios can pull them
Completing a chapter in Black Myth: Wukong rewards players with access to a brand-new area, though they are still free to return to previous chapters using the shrines, which double as fast-travel points. Players will want to return to previously explored areas to interact with special NPCs that, like in other Soulslike games, often require players to talk to them multiple times to trigger certain events and reveal all the information they have to offer. There are completely optional merchants that are easily missed yet vitally important, so people who don't have patience for that Soulslike trope will likely be annoyed by how Black Myth: Wukong handles its NP
According to Valve, it will be aiming for a basic 30 fps for general gaming performance, with some games reportedly able to hit up to 60 fps when testers got their hands on the Steam Deck prior to its official release. Although Nintendo already has amazing indie support in place for the Switch , describes it will be great to have another capable handheld on the market that can cater to fans, as well as offer a dizzyingly large indie game library. Although the Steam Deck is yet to be fully put through its paces by gamers, the opportunity to have every game in the Steam library playable on a portal device opens up a whole new world for indie game f
**Black Myth: Wukong is a challenging action RPG soullike ** , set in a mythological world based on the Journey to the West novel. It features action-packed combat against both regular enemies and towering bosses, including dragons and giants. Players will also get to experiment with different weapons, spells, and abilities to find the playstyle that best suits t
As far as locations go, most of those that players can travel to in Black Myth: Wukong are mentioned in Journey to the West . Others, like Crouching Tiger Temple, Turtle Island, Mirrormere, and the Pagoda Realm, are not — although the novel does include various pagoda structures. This is just another way that Black Myth: Wukong sets itself apart from Journey to the West to give players an experience they wouldn't even be able to get from the 16th-century novel the game is based
In many ways, Black Myth: Wukong could be considered a sequel to Journey to the West , as it makes regular past-tense references to the original story throughout its own roughly 30-hour narrative. However, Journey to the West is more the bones of Black Myth: Wukong than the muscles, with the novel essentially only serving as the foundation for the moving story and enchanting world Game Science has crafted here. It certainly doesn't shy away from including some of the most notable characters from Journey to the West — though many of them have been reconceptualized for the game — and its heavy reliance on Eastern mythology helps to fill in any gaps left in the wake of its semi-adaptive for
This leaves out Persona 3 Reload and Tekken 8 , both of which cleared 90 on Metacritic, as well as Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown (which scored 87), plus Hellblade 2 , Star Wars Outlaws , Avowed , Rise of the Ronin , and any other games the Switch 2 will launch with. Add in that Sony is yet to reveal PlayStation's slate beyond spring, and this could be a packed race.
The game combines exploration, combat, and puzzle-solving with a significant focus on the detective aspects of being a ghost exorcist, offering a balanced mix of these elements. The story in Banishers is surprisingly lengthy, delivering a variety of thrills and difficult choices for players who connect with its setting and charact
While it first appeared as though Game Science's Black Myth: Wukong would put players in direct control of Sun Wukong, the Monkey King from the 16th-century Chinese novel Journey to the West , the action RPG is set some time after the events of the novel. Ultimately, this means that Black Myth: Wukong is separated enough from Journey to the West that it can attempt to establish its own identity as an original story, as opposed to being a direct adaption of the novel. As a result, rather than playing through Black Myth: Wukong as Sun Wukong himself, players experience a reimagining of the world brought to life by Journey to the West through the eyes of a humble monkey simply referred to as the "Destined One" — an almost identical physical copy of Sun Wuk