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Rittai Ninja Katsugeki - Tenchu - Shinobi Hyakusen (Japan)

PlayStation
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1999
82
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✪ Reviewed on April 5, 2026
76

Tenchu Shinobi Hyakusen offers one hundred additional ninja missions in the world of the first Tenchu. The genre-founding stealth and silent elimination mechanics are fully utilised in this generous content. Ideal for fans of the original game wanting to extend the experience.

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Category
Action 1 player 16+
Description
Japanese Acquire edition of Tenchu, gathering Shinobi Gaisen and a full level editor. Created by Acquire and Sony Music Entertainment, released in 1999 in Japan under the Rittai Ninja Katsugeki Tenchu Shinobi Hyakusen title. Complete edition of original Tenchu and Shinobi Gaisen with map-creation level editor, over a hundred pre-supplied developer-made levels and Noriyuki Asakura oriental soundtrack. Japanese edition under the Rittai Ninja Katsugeki Tenchu Shinobi Hyakusen title.

Rittai Ninja Katsugeki - Tenchu - Shinobi Hyakusen review

3/5
Art direction
"Polished"
2/5
Music
"Decent"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"Mild"
Addictiveness
"Light"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,45 GB 📅11/11/1999
Published by Sony Music Entertainment

Rittai Ninja Katsugeki - Tenchu - Shinobi Hyakusen (PS1) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

An extended Japanese edition of Tenchu subtitled Shinobi Hyakusen, adding missions and challenges to the original ninja-stealth game. This expanded build, specific to the Japanese market, appeals to those wanting the most complete form of an Eastern-stealth founder. Its interest lies in this extra content and local run rather than extreme scarcity.

Is Rittai Ninja Katsugeki - Tenchu - Shinobi Hyakusen still worth playing in 2026?

Released in 2000 on PS1 in Japan, Acquire's project extends the Tenchu formula with a mission editor, a widened cast and a more dramatic staging. The stealth, grappling and shuriken management keeps a real identity, and the level gallery gains in architectural variety. The sometimes capricious camera and uneven AI require patience. Recommended today for stealth devotees, for Acquire fans curious about Tenchu's evolution on PS1 and for collectors fond of mission editors that rarely reached Western shores during the original PlayStation era globally.

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