---
product_id: 1242982
title: "Wu Tang: Shaolin Style"
brand: "activision"
price: "2923 DH"
currency: MAD
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.ma/products/1242982-wu-tang-shaolin-style
store_origin: MA
region: Morocco
---

# 1-4 Players Multi Tap Adaptable Retro Gaming Wu Tang: Shaolin Style

**Brand:** activision
**Price:** 2923 DH
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🕊️ Embrace the Shaolin Spirit!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Wu Tang: Shaolin Style by activision
- **How much does it cost?** 2923 DH with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.ma](https://www.desertcart.ma/products/1242982-wu-tang-shaolin-style)

## Best For

- activision enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted activision brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Cultural Icon:** Join the ranks of hip-hop history with Wu-Tang!
- • **Nostalgic Vibes:** Experience retro gaming like never before!
- • **Adaptable Gameplay:** Seamlessly switch between controllers with Multi Tap!
- • **Multiplayer Mayhem:** Team up or go solo with up to 4 players!
- • **Unleash Your Inner Wu-Tang:** Dive into the legendary world of Shaolin!

## Overview

Wu Tang: Shaolin Style is an engaging multiplayer video game that allows 1-4 players to immerse themselves in the iconic Wu-Tang universe. With its Multi Tap adaptability, players can easily connect multiple controllers for a seamless gaming experience, making it perfect for both solo and group play. Experience the nostalgia of retro gaming while celebrating a cultural phenomenon.

## Description

.com               Rap meets raw combat in Wu-Tang Clan: Shaolin Style, a violent fighting game that plays a lot like a '70s kung-fu flick--with a little Mortal Kombat thrown in. Members of the rap group Wu-Tang Clan are present and ready to mix it up. RZA, GZA, Raekwon, Method Man--they're all here, each with his own special shaolin fighting abilities. The soundtrack, which is sure to score points with fans of the rappers, provides background music for battle arenas set in Staten Island, New York, and ancient China. Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style also features three new exclusive Wu-Tang tracks. The cantankerous Wu-Tang Clan members meld perfectly into the video game world, and each character has some truly flashy moves. GZA wields a microphone on a chain-blade chord. Raekwon's specialty is cooking up opponents in a large boiling vat. Other members use a more traditional approach with swords and acrobatics. Although the game is a little slow and repetitive at times, it's dripping with raw street style and attitude--which should be enough to keep Wu-Tang fans happy while appeasing fighting game fans in general. Up to four players can fight at once. (Parents should note that this is one of the more violent fighting games on the market.) --Bill Hutchens Pros:Wicked combos with devastating effectsGood mix of pulsating rap rhythmsInteresting interactive arenasCons:Control is sometimes slow and clunkySlightly unbalanced; some characters easily overpower others                  Review               From Midway's 1983 arcade game based on the band Journey to Sega's Make Your Own Music Video series on the Sega CD, companies have been trying - usually in vain - to tie the recording industry and the gaming industry together in ways deeper than merely featuring an artist on a game's soundtrack. Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style takes the concepts of the Wu mythos, rife with influences from tons of 1970s kung-fu films, and turns it into a four-player arena fighting game with supernatural powers and bloody fatalities. The game's story is told through a few prerendered cutscenes. It seems that the last living Wu-Tang master, Xin, is hiding out on Staten Island, where he has nine pupils (the Wu-Tang Clan - or Rza, Genius, Ghostface Killah, Inspectah Deck, Raekwon, Master Killa, U-God, Ol' Dirty Bastard, and the Method Man, in case you forgot). Mong Zhu, an evil warlord, feels that he could rule the world if only he knew the ancient secrets of the Wu-Tang discipline. So he heads to New York and captures Xin. It's up to you, as one of the nine members of the multiplatinum-rap-group-turned-martial-arts-masters, to give chase and stop Mong Zhu. The one-player mode puts you through numerous levels, but more important than completing levels is earning all 36 chambers. Each chamber is achieved by completing a specific task, such as performing four throws in a match, using a new fatality, executing a tech roll, pulling off a ten-hit combo, beating several levels in a row without continuing, and visiting bonus stages. As you put together strings of related chambers, you'll unlock secrets, such as hidden characters, extra fatalities, concept art, and bonus costumes. The bonus costumes are really strange. ODB turns into a clown, Method Man turns into a guy holding a Final Fantasy-sized sword, and Genius becomes a leather-clad woman who, of course, still speaks in the Gza's gruff voice. The 36th chamber is earned by beating the game's final boss, but you can't face him until you've earned the first 35. Some chambers (blocking six hits in a row) are really easy to complete, but certain characters simply aren't very good at getting eight-, nine-, or ten-hit combos. So it's not unheard of to get 28 or 30 chambers and have to spend hours trying to juggle an enemy just right to get that eight-hitter chamber. The game's sub boss, a Raiden-clone complete with electricity powers, is mind-numbingly hard to beat when compared with the relative ease of defeating the rest of your opponents, including Mong Zhu. Expect to spend some time thinking of a cheap way to beat him. The fighting system is on the right track, but it just doesn't work out quite as well as it could have. It tries to be a cohesive, combo-driven system, but the arena-style free-for-all nature of the game's combat doesn't lend itself well to calculated fighting. Instead, it simply forces you to learn as many cheap corner juggles as you can. The entire game idea was lifted from Paradox's cancelled endeavor, Thrill Kill, and much of the gameplay and many of the moves remain. Each member of the Wu has his own style. The Rza fights with his razor sharp swords. Method uses a hammer. Raekwon fights in the style of a boxer. The Ol' Dirty Bastard fights in a drunken style - just as in real life. But most of the game's special moves aren't terribly impressive or flashy, and most multiplayer fights eventually boil down to who can swing the fastest and who forgets to hit the block button. Each battle ends in a fatality (provided you've entered the parental lockout code, which is found in the back of the game manual), that, for the most part, isn't terribly imaginative. How many times can you watch Rza pin a guy to a wall with his swords and shout, "Plug in, son! Get connected?" Even with four fatalities per character, they get old pretty quickly. There are a few imaginative finishers (ODB straps his foe to a giant rocket and launches him into the sky in his third fatality), but most of them are simple "hit the guy until he blows up-" or "cut off some body parts-"style fatalities. Speech usually accompanies the fatalities, but most of it sounds as though it were sampled from some other source rather than recorded specifically for the game. One of my favorites is ODB's first fatality, where he mounts his opponent and rips the guy's head off, which is followed by someone that sounds vaguely like Dirty (maybe he was having a bad day in the studio, or maybe he was too busy - with legal troubles or with releasing his second solo album - to actually record his own voice work for the game) exclaiming, "Don't mess with Big Baby Jesus!" It's funny every time I hear it, and it's the one of the few shining points in an otherwise drab game.--Jeff Gerstmann--Copyright © 1998 GameSpot Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of GameSpot is prohibited. -- GameSpot Review

## Images

![Wu Tang: Shaolin Style - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41KsI3v3llL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    A must for the Wu fans, or the ones that just love fighting games
  

*by R***E on Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2015*

fun game, the controls are hard to master, recommend playing it in a ps2 or ps1, may have problems with using it on ps3. Otherwise, this is a fun game and a bad ass soundtrack, was a well thought out and executed idea

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    Great condition
  

*by P***N on Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2014*

Came quickly and in great condition.  Shaolin Style is one of the few games that the PS3 isn't backwards compatible with which I suspected before I bought it... I just wanted to own this ridiculous piece of childhood.  I'm framing it.  Love it.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    One of the Best Licensed Games...
  

*by F***N on Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2009*

Although being a fan of Wu-Tang makes me a little biased, this game is actually a really fun Fighter! The arena style 3-D map fighting engine is quite nice as is the life points system. With an original Wu-Tang soundtrack (which can be gotten by putting the game in your computer's disc drive), awesome art, and 12 unique characters; this game is worth the money. Each of the nine original members are featured characters, each with his own martial art style; also have a clone character as well as a secondary costume. There are also three other unique characters which are from the game's story mode. The story mode is excellent with fun unlockables and quite a few multiplayer maps. Multiplayer is 2-4 players and is quite fun, and each character's unique fatalities are really funny and bad-ass.Although this is a psone game, it works on my Ps2 slim fine. I'm not sure if it works on the PS3 or PS2 fat, however.Also for people who don't like to see blood and guts, there is a parental violence lock that makes it completely tame.And as an added bonus, Ghostface Killa was a major designer on the game!

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*Product available on Desertcart Morocco*
*Store origin: MA*
*Last updated: 2026-06-01*