In the landscape of early 2010s action games, few titles occupy the peculiar niche of Blades of Time. Developed by Gaijin Entertainment and released in 2012, it arrived as a successor to the cult classic X-Blades. While the game was met with mixed reviews upon release, it has since garnered a dedicated following for its surprisingly deep time-rewind mechanics and cheeky protagonist, Ayumi.
Unique Combat: Mixing gunplay with sword combos and time manipulation. Blades of Time -NTSC-U--NTSC-J--PAL--ISO-
Step 4: Finalize the ISO File
If you want, I can expand this into a full-length magazine-style article (1,200–1,800 words) with developer history, level-by-level walkthrough, boss guides, and screenshots — tell me which sections to include and which region/version (NTSC‑U, NTSC‑J, PAL) you want emphasized. Lost in Time: A Deep Dive into the
Released on March 16, 2012. It supported multiple European languages and operated at the standard 50Hz/60Hz PAL signal for those territories. ISO/Digital: The game is available as a digital download on Steam (PC) , and was remastered for the Nintendo Switch in May 2019. ⏳ Key Gameplay Mechanic: Time Rewind The standout feature of Blades of Time Time Rewind Unique Combat: Mixing gunplay with sword combos and
NTSC-J (Japan): Released on March 8, 2012, published by Konami.
Explaining the story differences between this and its predecessor, X-Blades.