Supreme Duelist

Advertisement

Editor‘s Review

Supreme Duelist, made by Neron’s Brother, is built on physics-based movement and ragdoll reactions, yet its depth in combat comes primarily from the game’s large and distinct weapon roster. In contrast to other casual stickman fighters which consider weapon type to be cosmetic, this game links each weapon to certain hitboxes, swing paths, projectile regulations, cooldown duration, and directional capabilities. Games may appear disorganized at the surface, but upon getting used to it, one quickly understands that weapon identity is the main factor of skill expression.

 

The weapons list comprises melee, ranged, and hybrid tools, but what truly defines Supreme Duelist's combat identity is in how differently each one behaves with the physics engine. A broadsword produces long, sweeping horizontal arcs that allow players to control space while the katana executes fast, precise cuts with shorter reach. Hammers create heavy knockback that can send opponents flying off across the map, sometimes straight into stage hazards. Spears reward timing: a well-placed forward thrust can create instant ring-outs on maps with narrow walkways. Even humble punch-style weapons rely on directional flicks to convert momentum into meaningful damage.

 

Ranged weapons also feel bespoke. The bow launches light arrows with a slight gravitational drop, making mid-air duels a matter of judging trajectory rather than tapping for easy hits. The revolver fires single, high-impact bullets with noticeable recoil, causing the shooter's ragdoll body to jolt backward - an intentional design quirk that players can exploit to reposition or dodge. The laser gun fires perfectly straight beams that require commitment: a mistimed shot leaves the user vulnerable during recovery frames. Bombs behave differently again, as their explosion radius interacts with ragdoll physics to send both players flying if thrown carelessly.

 

What ties these weapons together is the game's gesture-based "flick" mechanic. Each weapon has a basic move triggered by simple joystick direction, but its special attack requires a strong directional flick. It is through this system that movement becomes offense. An example is that when a spear flick is used, the lunge results is long and much farther, where the hammer results in slamming of a shockwave, and the bow volley is a triple-arrow shot. Since flick detection relies on momentum, sharp turns in direction and air rolling are included in advanced playing. Skilled users learn to chain jumps, wall bounces, and weapon flicks to create angles of attack that are hard to predict.

 

These mechanics have potent strengths: the diversity of weapons means there's always variety to a match, and the physics interactions involved in combat create 'highlight' moments that will often feel unique to the specific encounter. Mastery has meaning: players who can understand the subtleties of weapon recoil, timing, and flick angles will reliably outperform those just relying on random swinging. This roster invites experimentation, too: finding the personality for each weapon is a satisfying progression loop that doesn't require any sort of leveling or unlock grind.

 

However, this depth introduces drawbacks: some weapons have higher damage, greater knockback, or safer recovery windows by their very nature, which makes balance inconsistent across the roster. The ragdoll system is entertaining, yet it produces unpredictable outcomes- perfectly aligned hits may whiff due to awkward limb positions, or a small tap sends an enemy flying because two physics objects collided in some odd way. New players may feel overwhelmed when moving from simple melee tools into weapons that require mastering recoil or explosive knockback. The flick mechanic can be quite imprecise on smaller screens and sometimes registers a special move when a player intends a regular attack.

 

Overall, Supreme Duelist's weapon and combat design is a standout element that elevates the game past casual chaos. Its diverse arsenal, combined with physics-driven interactions, creates a system rewarding in its creativity and mechanical skill but still embracing of the unpredictable.

 

By Jerry | Copyright © Game-Nook - All Rights Reserved

show more
Get the game

Good App Guaranteed:

We only provide official apps from the App Store, Google Play, which do not contain viruses and malware, please feel free to click!

Featured games

I Am Security
Clash of Clans
Pink Panther EDM Custom Tiles
Sonic the Hedgehog™ Classic
Smurfs Bubble Shooter Story
Toca Hair Salon 2
Disney Frozen Free Fall Games
Color Oasis - Color by Number
Smurfs Magic Match
Minecraft Sticker Pack
Noggin Preschool Learning App
My Talking Tom 2
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City
Talking Angela
Elmo Loves ABCs
Lamar - Idle Vlogger
Snoopy Spot the Difference
Miraculous Ladybug & Cat Noir
Block Jigsaw Magic-Girl Puzzle
Pokémon HOME
SpongeBob: Krusty Cook-Off
Spider Stickman Rope Hero
Rovio Classics: AB
Super Mario Run
TFT: Teamfight Tactics
Boomerang Make and Race
My Talking Tom Friends
Angry Birds Dream Blast
SongPop® - Guess The Song
Batman - The Telltale Series
Christmas Twist
Balatro
Granny
Boomerang Make and Race 2
MARVEL Puzzle Quest: Hero RPG
Sonic The Hedgehog 2 Classic