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    Shadow Labyrinth review – Pac-Man meets Metroid

    Picture of by David Spangler
    by David Spangler
    • July 18, 2025

    Cliff Notes – Shadow Labyrinth review – Pac-Man meets Metroid

    • Uninspired Gameplay: Shadow Labyrinth offers a standard Metroidvania experience that lacks originality, failing to innovate beyond its Pac-Man references.
    • Visual and Narrative Weaknesses: The game features bland visuals and a confusing story, detracting from player engagement and enjoyment.
    • Mixed Mini-Games: While the Pac-Man Championship Edition mini-games provide some fun, they highlight the overall lack of creativity in the main game.

    Shadow Labyrinth review – Pac-Man meets Metroid

    Shadow Labyrinth – Pac-Man doesn’t need this (Bandai Namco)

    The Pac-Man episode of Amazon Prime show Secret Level is the inspiration for this strange new Metroidvania and its peculiar mix of influences.

    2025 has so far been a good year for weird games, with plenty of unlikely oddities, including one featuring a boy stuck in a permanent T-pose and whose best friend is a singing giraffe, and the latest from Hideo Kojima where you take orders from a talking shop mannequin and fight ghosts by flinging a boomerang soaked in your own blood at them.

    It may seem a cliché but most of the strangest video games are made in Japan; those two certainly and so is this: a grim and gritty 2D Metroidvania that’s also a secret Pac-Man game. As bizarre as that idea is it’s worryingly reminiscent of Bomberman: Act Zero on the original Xbox, which reimagined the colourful party game as a dystopian nightmare and became infamous as one of the worst video games ever made.

    Shadow Labyrinth is nowhere near that bad, but then it’s not actually that gritty either. It’s inspired by a 10 minute episode of Amazon Prime Video show Secret Level, which reimagined Pac-Man as a sci-fi story about a starfighter pilot crash landing on an alien world and being manipulated by a malign Pac-Man. We haven’t seen it, but we hope it was better than the game tie-in.

    Before we learned of the Amazon connection, we assumed the game had been inspired by the famous The Madness of Mission 6 fan art for Pac-Man, which you’ve probably seen on a T-shirt or two, if you’ve ever been to any kind of video game convention or similar event. That almost certainly would’ve been a lot more interesting than the vapid, cliché ridden sci-fi tale that is Shadow Labyrinth’s actual backstory.

    Right from the start, the plot is filled with nonsensical sounding names and jargon, but the short version is you’re a nameless swordsman who’s been revived by a floating yellow orb called Puck, that anyone else would recognise as Pac-Man. (The name is a reference to the fact that the original arcade game was originally meant to be called Puck Man, until someone realised how easily the first letter of the word could be defaced.)

    After the brief, and very confusing, introduction you’re immediately knee deep in Metroid homages, whacking weird alien bugs with your sword and practicing your 2D platform jumping. All of this is fine, although the bland and clinical-looking art style is immediately unappealing and almost makes it look like an old Flash game.

    Expert, exclusive gaming analysis

    The core gameplay is absolutely bog standard Metroidvania but the degree to which it copies the look and feel of Metroid, rather than Castlevania or anything more original, is strange and off-putting, given this is supposed to be a Pac-Man game. More importantly, Shadow Labyrinth is no Metroid Dread, and not only is it not as well designed or executed (the signposting is awful) but the only thing unique about it is the shoehorned in Pac-Man references.

    Like all Metroidvanias, there’s a lot of exploration and backtracking in Shadow Labyrinth, as you pick up new abilities and weapons that then allow you to access areas you’ve previously seen, but which were inaccessible the first time round. That sense of slowly opening up the whole map, slowly peeling open its secrets, is the core appeal of the genre but this is a very uninspired implementation of the concept, with a hundred better example available elsewhere – especially from indie developers.

    You’ve probably already guessed, but one of the most important uses for Puck is taking over the morph ball role from Metroid, as you squeeze into places you can’t usually fit. The Spider Ball upgrade, that allows you to stick to walls and tracks, is the real focus though, as you move along like the arcade game, eating little white dots along the way.

    There’re more explicit recreations of the classic Pac-Man gameplay in a series of mini-games, which look and sound like the excellent Pac-Man Championship Edition games. They even use the same music, which only begs the question of why Bandai Namco didn’t just make a new one of those, instead of wasting everyone’s time with this Metroid nonsense.

    Having Puck combine with your character to become a sort of mechanical demon Pac-Man dragon sounds interestingly weird in theory but even that doesn’t make the game any more fun to play.

    To add more salt to the wound, Puck is a very annoying character, and the whole game comes across as obnoxious and abrasive. When we say our favourite bit is the subtler references to other Namco classics, like Galaga and Xevious, it should give some indication of how much we enjoyed the majority of the game.

    Pac-Man has been around for 45 years and has aged better than most other golden age coin-ops, with the Pac-Man Championship Edition series keeping the core gameplay fresh and exciting even after all these decades. There’s nothing fresh or exciting about Shadow Labyrinth though, the memory of which will linger for far less time.

    Shadow Labyrinth review summary

    In Short: Mixing Pac-Man with Metroid seems like an enjoyably strange idea at first, until you realise just how bland and unimaginative the end result is.

    Pros: You have to get a long wrong to make a Metroidvania completely uninteresting and the sword-based combat is mildly engaging. The Pac-Man Championship Edition mini-games are fun.

    Cons: Once you dismiss the Pac-Man gimmicks the game has no notable ideas of its own and pales compared to better examples of the genre. Confusing and unengaging story, with ugly visuals.

    Score: 4/10

    Formats: PlayStation 5 (reviewed), Nintendo Switch, Xbox Series X/S, PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch 2, and PC
    Price: £24.99
    Publisher: Bandai Namco
    Developer: Bandai Namco Studios
    Release Date: 18th July 2025
    Age Rating: 12

    Why is it so obsessed with copying Metroid? (Bandai Namco)

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