When the dust settles, Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice will be nothing more than another notch in my belt and I’ll finally become a master shinobi. ![]() It doesn’t matter if it takes 5, 10, 15, 20 episodes or more. FromSoftware expert Dan Tack will act as my trusty coach, and I’ll also have Andrew Reiner in my corner to provide his entertaining brand of commentary and moral support. However, I have an even better support system. Okay, I may have embellished that last bit. ![]() I scaled mountains, meditated under waterfalls, and trained under the tutelage of Tibetan monks: all to acquire the mental and physical skills necessary to beat Sekiro once and for all. After suffering defeat after defeat I walked away for over a year and decided to travel the globe in search of enlightenment. CT, I’ll be tackling Sekiro in its entirety in a quest for redemption.Īs much as I enjoyed Sekiro I never finished the game after I hit a wall whose name rhymes with “Lardian Grape”. ![]() The game’s memorable bosses can’t be felled by simply grinding and out-leveling them. Released in 2019 to critical acclaim, this tough-as-nails ninja epic flipped the FromSoftware formula on its head with a combat and parry system that promotes pure skill and aggression. After watching Dan Tack wipe the floor with Bloodborne in our last Super Replay, it’s time that I, Marcus Stewart, do the same with its successor, Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice.
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