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Muramasa: The Demon Blade [a] is a 2009 action role-playing game developed by Vanillaware and published for the Wii by Marvelous Entertainment (Japan), Ignition Entertainment (North America), and Rising Star Games (Europe). An expanded PlayStation Vita version was published in 2013 by Marvelous AQL in Japan and Aksys Games in Western territories.
This title was Muramasa: The Demon Blade for the Wii. [16] The concept originated during production of Odin Sphere and was sold to Marvelous Entertainment in 2006, who co-funded production. [2] During this period, Vanillaware made an attempt at "two-line development", with Shiga leading development on a second project. [15]
We learned back in September that Vanillaware's Muramasa: The Demon Blade was making the move from the Wii to the PlayStation Vita. Aksys Games has now announced the handheld version, which will ...
Muramasa: The Demon Blade; O. Odin Sphere; U. Unicorn Overlord This page was last edited on 15 December 2022, at 19:33 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
Following Vanillaware's successes with Odin Sphere and Muramasa: The Demon Blade, Kamitani restarted the project. Originally set to be published by UTV Ignition Entertainment, that company's withdrawal from the gaming market led to Atlus taking up the project.
[1] [7] It was part of an attempt by Vanillaware to develop two games at the same time; Kumatanchi was in production alongside Muramasa: The Demon Blade. However, there were little to no staff for Kumatanchi, forcing Shiga to act as both director and art designer. Due to this and the tight production schedule, development was tiring and ...
Muramasa was a famous Japanese swordsmith who founded the Muramasa school of sword-making in the early 16th century CE. Muramasa may also refer to: Muramasa: The Demon Blade, a 2009 video game for the Wii, later released as Muramasa Rebirth on PS Vita; Mura Masa, UK electronic music artist
Muramasa-ba (村正刃, "Muramasa-like edge") —The first particular characteristic of his is the frequent use of a wave-shaped hamon. The hamon of Muramasa is categorized as gunome-midare, that is, it forms randomized wave-like shapes. In particular, Muramasa's gunome-midare has very long, shallow valleys between a cluster of gunome shapes. [2]