Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Fighting (PlayStation 2) » Bujingai: The Forsaken City  
New Releases
WWE Smackdown vs Raw 2009
Dragon Ball Z: Infinite World
King of Fighters Collection- The Orochi Saga
Mortal Kombat Kollection (Deception, Armageddon, Shaolin Monks)
Namco Classic Fighter Collection
Bestsellers
WWE Smackdown vs Raw 2009
God of War 2
God of War
Dragon Ball Z: Infinite World
Iron Man
Bully
WWE Smackdown vs. Raw 2008
Final Fantasy X
King of Fighters Collection- The Orochi Saga
Incredible Hulk

Bujingai: The Forsaken City

Bujingai: The Forsaken City

zoom enlarge 

Other Views:
From: Red
Category: Video Games

List Price: $39.99
Buy Used: $5.69
You Save: $34.30 (86%)



New (6) Used (13) from $5.69

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 13089

Platform: Playstation2
Genre: Action Games
ESRB: Teen
Media: Video Game
Batteries Included: No
Age: 12 - 20 years
Operating System: Playstation 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 0.1 x 0.1 x 0

Model: 682384620199
UPC: 682384620199
EAN: 0682384620199
ASIN: B0001HAI68

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • From concept to creation, the focus on the highly-stylized art remains constant. Environments include: detailed cityscapes, threatening canyons, mystical temples, desolate city streets, breathtaking courtyards, and more.
  • Bujingai employs beautiful implementation of Hong Kong cinema motifs; ruined cities, ancient temples, and bamboo thickets bring to mind films like Chinese Ghost Story or Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
  • Furious, fast-paced fighting in the tradition of Hong Kong Cinema-style action movies utilizing a deep, yet intuitive, multifaceted combat system.
  • Employ sword combat and magic attacks, combined with acrobatics, gliding, and wall walking as you attack multiple enemies at once, or unleash a flurry of precision attacks on a single enemy.
  • Easy to use controls make the game effortlessly fun, while advanced play encourages players to learn the skill of carefully timed combinations in order to defeat the more powerful monsters.

Customer Reviews:   Read 7 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars one of the best i have played   February 9, 2008
This game is really cool. Its got lots of fun things to unlock and a intresting story. Bujingai is probably one of the most beautiful games i have ever played and its action packed.


5 out of 5 stars PLAY NOW!!!   July 3, 2006
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I don't know how many people have ever heard of this game. I surely hadn't and only discovered it through my obsession with Gackt-sama, who happens to play the role of the protagonist Lau. I just got this game yesterday and I am completely in love with it! I only regret not hearing about it sooner.

To start off, the game is beautiful- the character designs, the environments. The music, both relaxing or blood pumping, depending on what you are doing in the game at the time, fits the overall feel of the game very well. The movements you perform while fighting are not only beautiful in their elegance and grace, but they look cool and are a lot of fun to do. Yes, this is what you would call a button masher, but it feels rewarding to see it executed on screen. There are a variety of moves you can do both on the ground and in the air ranging from kicks and spins, to shooting a ball of fire and creating a powerful whirlwind. Lau can even scale walls and glide.

The story is decent, although I've chosen to spend more time killing things than progressing with the storyline. I've heard this game described as a mix between God of War and Devil May Cry, and I wholeheartedly agree. At the end of each level, you are ranked on a basis of style, timing, the amount of orbs you've collected (for upgrading Lau and making him stronger), and such. The tutorial of movements and combat at the beginning of the game is thorough, clear, and can even be viewed multiple times in case you forget something. There is also an area where you can practice your moves on a training dummy.

In addition to playing the game, there are dozens of unlockable features, such as movies of interviews and motion captures.

This is such a wonderful game and I encourage you all to play it. For only $20, how can you possibly go wrong?? I hope this review was helpful. XD



4 out of 5 stars Gakuto kawaii desu, ne?   January 24, 2006
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Okay, so its not the best game in the world, but it has Gackt in it! That alone is reason enough to get it. Though I wonder, are all the hidden easter-eggs (interviews with our beloved Gakuto) still in the english version of the game, or are they only in the japanese import? For those who dunno who Gackt is, he's the ex vocalist for Malice Mizer and a pretty successful solo J-pop singer. And this is not the first time he's been used as a model for a game character, he claims that Squall from FF7 was designed after him.


4 out of 5 stars what happens when you cross anime, Chinese-Taiji-fencing, a Japanese pop idol, and Devil May Cry?   December 7, 2005
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

You wind up with Bujingai: The Forsaken City. Developed by Tatio, this game is litterally Devil May Cry, on crack. The game basically boils down to you running..or leaping, or flying all over various levels, beating the crap out of anything that moves.

First off, the story isn't really that strong, but it can easily be broken down. You play Lau Wang Yu, and it's your job to stop your once friend, now rival Lei Shen-Long from destroying a satellite that just so happens to be connected to the life support of the Earth. I could say more, but I'd be spoiling what little story and secrets await players of this game.

The real meat of the game however, is the gameplay, and by gameplay, I mean the combat. Fast, insane, mesmerizing, the only way to describe this silky smooth dance or death, is to litterally compare it to a Devil May Cry fight infused with a grace of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon. Not only that, you have the ability to run on walls, glide, and fight midair. Of course, at first, you'll just bash the square button till your finger bleeds, but later on into the game, you'll find you need to actually do combos and "clash".

Whats a "clash"? Glad you ask. Clashing, is what this game is really about. When you clash, you go into an attack mode where you and the enemy parry attacks, and fight like most action stars do, in just about every Hong Kong action flic or Martial arts film. Colors fly, swords clash, and you'll even take the fights to the air, and clash while running on the walls. To be honest, you may not see these things, since the fights are entirely in your hands. I ran up the wall, the enemy followed...well the boss enemy anyway. The game itself is bizzarely easy, up until level three, where the difficulty goes up, due to some very intense and crazy boss battles.

There really isn't much else to it. You objectives run from killing everything that moves with uber style and grace, to collecting coins and such, to open a barrier. When you get to the end of the level, you fight an insanely hard boss, that will challenge you to the degree where, you are GLUED to your TV, watching every sword clash, and the intensity here, is what scored this game a 4.

I can however, also recount some of the problems. The enemies you face, are as generic as they come. They don't vary enough either, so expected to beat the crud out of the same enemy type, for quite some time. You also can't break out of an attack or combo, till AFTER the animation is finished. The story as I said, is ok at best, and really...they could have done much better for this. Beyond everything here? The game is very short.

About six-eight hours at max, to blaze through the game, unless the bosses give you such a challenge that you die many times, and spend maybe three days to beat this game. There are unlockable extras, but really, they aren't worth the time.

Bujingai is a fun game, no denying that, but it's also what could be called a serious sleeper hit, that got little to no attention, and it is insanely hard to find a copy at this point in the PS2's lifespan. If you find a copy, and it's 25 or less, you have no excuse. If you beat it, and you have the real case(I don't), sell it on Ebay or somthing. Last I checked, it was going for over 40 on there.

Either way, this game is a must have for hack and slash action gamers, Gackt fans, and people who want a Devil May Cry style game, with more grace and..well, just plain killer style.



4 out of 5 stars Boy, Gackt = INSTANT SALES.   October 6, 2005
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

The game Bujingai is interesting. It has Easy mode and Normal mode (I'm not sure about a Hard mode... I wouldn't want to see that >_>). I started off playing it in Easy mode, and some parts made me wonder whether I was still playing in Easy mode. Especially some of the bosses. You really have to have good real-time playing skills, or else they'll be so fast and leave you behind to diiie.

The story and stage mode of Bujingai remind me very much of Chaos Legion. If you've played Chaos Legion, you've played Bujingai in some respect. However, that's not to say that Bujingai isn't a great game. The main character Lau uses two swords and a seriously punch-packing array of spells.

This game is minimalistic at best. Very short, but beautiful in it's execution. There's nothing too complicated (except maybe the gliding thing.. argh, that killed me) and that makes Bujingai have both stress relieving properties (hack and slash!) and a better replay value than some games.

There's also the unlockables. Every fitfh gold coin you collect you unlock something. The unlockable interviews, among other things alone are worth playing the game many times.

All in all, I recommend this game.

..Wow, I managed to go through this and not mention Gackt, once!