Skulls Of The Shogun Monks

Reviews'Fast, compact and yet consistently thoughtful, there's nothing else quite like Skulls of the Shogun - and, for me, it earns its place amongst the genre's greats. '9/10 –'Skulls of the Shogun encapsulates whatever essence puts Castle Crashers at the top of the XBLA charts year after year, and does so without infringing on that game's intellectual property or overall vibe.' 5/5 –'Equal parts quirky and complex, it only comes to prove that the glory days of this often forgotten genre aren’t quite gone.'

About This GameJoystiq says '.we found Skulls of the Shogun to be an absolutely enjoyable experience – so much so that we gave it a perfect score.' It's fast-paced turn-based strategy inspired by Advance Wars, and supercharged with fighting-game flare! Enter the Samurai Afterlife and join forces with vibrant ghost-samurai warriors, magical animal monks, and mustachioed samurai generals.

And now Skulls of the Shogun tastes even better in the Bone-a-Fide Edition, which adds a brand-new episode, the new Tanuki Monk, and a heaping helping of new features!

Skulls of the shogun monks cast

There are a lot of people asking 'Is this game good' 'Should I buy it' and so on, so I thought it was a good idea to make a post about the gameplay you can expect from Skulls of the Shogun.Skulls of the Shogun supports up to 4 player multiplayer, there is no co-op campaign, you can play 2v2, 1v1, or FFA up to 4 players, there is local multiplayer. Multiplayer matches can be played both asynch and real time.Skulls of the Shogun was originally a Windows 8 and xbox exclusive thanks to Microsoft, but has now been released on Steam. It has a fully fledged 15-20 hour campaign with a ton of multiplayer maps as well, I personally have played over 30 hours and I haven't even done half the campaign yet.It works on Windows, Mac and Linux.StoryYou are the fearsome general Akamoto, who was just about to become the shogun after winning countless battles, but you got stabbed in the back just as you won your final battle and sent to the realm of the dead. There you meet an imposter who claims to be you, as well as several other hostile generals hindering your way to the doors to the afterlife.GameplayThe basics - Skulls of the Shogun is a turn based strategy game where you get 5 actions per turn, if you move a unit without doing anything, but select another unit before cancelling, it will count as using an action, you can however return to the unit later and attack/move with it.

Name: Tanuki Monk Game: Skulls of the Shogun Series: 1 Card Number: 5 of 7 Description: The troublesome trickster distracts friend and foe alike with his enormous.bells. Skulls of the Shogun - Tanuki Monk Steam Trading Cards Wiki FANDOM powered by Wikia.

Your units have circular movement instead of squares or hexagons.Another important aspect is that whenever a unit dies, they drop a skull. Skulls can be eaten by your units to gain +2 max hp, up to a maximum of +6, and heals for 3 if they were missing any health, however, you cannot eat any of your own skulls. Once you eat your third skull your unit becomes a demon, which means they get an extra action per turn (and a free action the same turn you eat the third skull) If the general of a team dies, all units of that team instantly disappear, including any skulls they lost on the ground, and they are defeated.All units can counterattack by default, counterattacks deal less damage than full attacks, but still a bit. Units can always counter attack as long as they are in range and are not dying to the attack in question.To summon additional units you must have haunted a unit shrine from before and spend rice to buy units (100 for infantry, 150 for cavalry, 200 for archers). Rice is gained by haunting rice patties. Haunting something takes one action and one turn, where your unit is left defenseless and wont counterattack anything.

By standing on already haunted tiles you will heal for 2hp, the initial haunting unit also gets the 2hp healing, which will negate any minor damage you take while haunting.There are three basic unit types, as well as four different monks. All units have 6 base HP (your general too)The Infantry is your tankiest unit, it has 3 armor (which reduces all damage taken by 3) but can't move very far, it also inflicts the most knockback which can be useful for pushing petty enemies down cliffs or into the river.

Infantry deals 5 damage.The Cavalry is a very mobile unit, but only has 2 armor and deals minor knockback. Cavalry deals 5 damage.The Archer deals 6 damage per attack and is ranged, this however also means that the archer only has 1 armor and deals no knockback whatsoever. Archers can counterattack other ranged units if it's not a killing blow, but they do not counterattack infantry or cavalry.

They can move slightly further than infantry.The General is your most important unit, if he dies it's game over. He gains +1 max HP per turn as long as he is left asleep, and he gets 2 actions per turn by default, which stacks with the extra action from becoming a demon (Yes, your general can become a demon too). He deals 6 damage and has 3 armor, he can also move quite far (but not quite as far as cavalry). He is generally(!) used in a last ditch effort to avoid losing. A single demon general can easily turn the tides of an entire war by himself due to extremely powerful triple attacks.Monks are special units that you can only gain by haunting shrines. There are 5 different shrines, one for each monk, and one where you pick which monk you want. Most of them can't directly deal damage, but instead have spells.

They unlock additional spells by eating skulls, and they also benefit from the demon bonus if they eat three. All monks can counterattack, and all monks die (and leave a skull in their place) if an enemy haunts their shrine uninterrupted.Salamander Monks are the only monks that can directly deal damage. They are basically Archers, but with longer range (and therefore also a longer minimum range). By eating one skull you get the ability to summon a very strong demon on top of an enemy (but it takes 1 turn to spawn, and is also hostile to everyone, including you), at two skulls you get the ability to make a shield on allied units that makes enemies take 2 damage from attacking them, and at three skulls you can do a lightning storm that deals 3 damage + 4 on initial target in a rather large area with long range (combo this with being a demon and you can 2-shot a large portion of someones army)Fox Monks can heal a unit of your choice for 3 health per turn. By eating one skull you get the ability to turn any skulls into 75 rice (even if they are your own), by eating two you can shield an ally and add 2 armor to them, and by eating three you gain the ability to resurrect dead units if the enemy hasn't eaten their skull.Crow Monks have a basic spell that pushes people (very far actually).

They can also blow out enemy haunted buildings, interrupt haunting, push skulls, or generally be ♥♥♥♥♥ about everything and push all your units into the ocean. Originally posted by:The best gameplay in the world doesn't matter when the interface is very poorly designed. I'm sure there is some good gameplay in skulls of the shogun but it is too well hidden behind the frustrating interface. I don't see how the interface is so poorly designed, you posted about it in another thread basically saying this game is trash purely because of the interface and I don't really get that.The feature the game definitely needs is an 'undo all moves' button, but at least that can be avoided with some proper planning. Other than that movement works fine, selecting things works fine, the menus work fine, attacking the right enemy when 4 different guys are stacked on top of each other works fine because the one you are targetting grows in size and everything that isn't your target becomes faded black, if the wrong one is in focus you just try to select another guy.

Prey 2 cancelled. (I could see an easier way to target things being good here but it's a bit too late for that, maybe if every player had a set of unit portraits that could be brought up with a button and every portrait selected one of the units currently on the field, the general always being in the number 1 slot and units after that changing as they die or get created).