Skip to main content

Konami just released its best new game in years

Konami is best known for franchises like Silent Hill, Metal Gear, Bomberman, and Contra, but it has drawn quite a bit of ire for how it has treated them over the past decade. That said, the storied Japanese game developer and publisher has been on a bit of a rebound recently. It’s reviving its older franchises with collections and brand new games like Contra: Operation Galuga and Super Bomberman R 2 and publishing some quality indie-level games like Skelattack and Super Crazy Rhythm Castle. Cygni: All Guns Blazing finds the middle ground between those two things and is Konami’s best game in years because of that.

Cygni is the first game from KeelWorks, a Scottish indie studio, but it’s also a flashy shoot-’em-up that wouldn’t feel out of place in an arcade. It stands alongside classic Konami sci-fi shoot-’em-ups like Gradius while also providing its own unique takes on the genre. While Gradius is a side-scroller, Cyngi plays out from a top-down view, Galaga-style. Players control an ace pilot as they assist Earth’s forces in fighting against a biomechanical species of aliens that humans awakened on the titular planet of Cygni. While gameplay certainly takes precedence over narrative, it still has some interesting themes regarding the environmental impact of war and colonization in the brief cutscene snippets between levels.

Shoot 'em up gameplay from Cygni.
Konami

Cygni is still quite enjoyable if you ignore the lore, though. Each level plays out as a visual story of its own, with distinct acts that shake up what players are doing. That should satisfy players who want to engage with this game on a deeper level, although your eyes should also be glued to the shoot-’em-up action taking place on screen. Players can shoot at what’s in front of them and fire off missiles, and they have a limited number of hits their shield can take before dying. Cygni sets itself apart by giving players a bit more control over where they shoot.

Recommended Videos

Not only can players orient the front-facing fire on slight angles, but by using a secondary weapon, players can fire toward the ground as well. This gives Cygni a sense of depth that most shoot-’em-ups from this perspective just don’t have, and it also made me pay more attention to the beautifully animated background of each level. KeelWorks has experience in 3D animation, and that became abundantly clear as I saw battles between humanity and robotic alien creatures disturbed from eternal slumber. If this were the 1980s, each of these levels would probably be its own game, but here, it’s all one package.

It’ll take players a while to master, too. In anything higher than its Easy difficulty, Cyngi provides a thorough and unforgiving challenge if you aren’t closely monitoring your ship’s position and keeping track of how much shield you have left. You’ll die a lot, but part of the fun of this genre is getting to play the same level over and over again to rack up a higher score. It doesn’t have the accessibility features of a retro throwback like Volgarr the Viking 2 and instead opts for the sink-or-swim approach of its inspiration. If you’re struggling, I’d recommend setting the difficulty to easy to learn the levels and then slowly increase it over time.

A battle against a bigger enemy in Cygni: All Guns Blazing
Konami

Cygni is a textbook case of a classic gaming genre being modernized on current platforms. That’s a niche that feels surprisingly apt for Konami, which right now is focused on reviving, remastering, or remaking games from its older franchises. Cygni approaches that idea from the opposite direction, potentially creating a new franchise for Konami that harks back to when the company was at its peak. While upcoming Konami games like Silent Hill 2’s remake and Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater will also need to be great for this company to restore its reputation, this is a creative step in the right direction.

Cygni: All Guns Blazing is available now for PC, Xbox Series X/S, and PlayStation 5.

Topics
Tomas Franzese
As a Gaming Staff Writer at Digital Trends, Tomas Franzese reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
July’s Xbox Game Pass lineup is the best the service has offered in months
Key art for Neon White

Microsoft unveiled the batch of eight games that will come to the Xbox Game Pass subscription service over the course of the first half of July. It's a solid lineup featuring quite a few amazing indie games. In particular, Neon White is a standout because it's one of my favorite indie games of the 2020s, and it's finally coming to Xbox while launching straight into Microsoft's subscription service.

Neon White initially launched on other platforms in 2022 and was developed by Angel Matrix, a studio founded by Donut County's Ben Esposito. It's a first-person shooter but doesn't play like Doom or Call of Duty. Instead, players must play cards in order to use their weapons, which double as both attacks and platforming assists. That means Neon White ends up being more like a speedrunning-focused puzzle platformer rather than a traditional first-person shooter.

Read more
These underrated 16-bit classics just got new life on Nintendo Switch
A still from the intro cinematic for Rocket Knight Adventures: Re-Sparked.

There is no shortage of all-time greats to choose from when seeking out a new 16-bit platformer to play. SNES and Sega Genesis classics like Super Mario World, Sonic the Hedgehog 2, and Mega Man X are probably the first things to come to mind. During that same era, Contra and Castlevania developer Konami released a series of platformers that rivaled those greats but didn't get as much recognition as they deserved. Now, these titles are getting a new lease on life thanks to a collection that launched earlier this month on PC, PlayStation, and Nintendo Switch.

I'm talking about Rocket Knight Adventures, a 1993 release on the Sega Genesis, as well as its follow-ups on Genesis and SNES, separate titles both named Sparkster. These 2D platformers put players in control of an opossum named Sparkster, who wears a suit of armor with a rocket strapped to its back. These games aren't as widely remembered as many of their peers but are well worth the time of any platformer fan, so they are definitely worth checking out now through Limited Run Games and Konami's Rocket Knight Adventures: Re-Sparked, which came out right in the middle of Summer Game Fest this year.

Read more
4 new games just surprise released during a packed Wholesome Direct stream
Frogs sit in a refuge in Kamaeru: A Frog Refuge.

A Wholesome Direct stream took place today, showcasing over 70 upcoming cozy games. Four new games got a surprise launch as part of the show, with many more getting Steam demos today.

Wholesome Direct is n video game live broadcast that focuses on "cozy" games. That's a broad term that tends to include farming sims, puzzle games, and more. This summer's show was loaded with new game announcements and updates on previously revealed titles, like Dungeons of Hinterberg.

Read more