Ghost Of Tsushima Meets Baldur’s Gate 3 in New RPG You Can Try Free Now
Summary
Shadow of the Road is a story-driven, turn-based RPG from Another Angle Games set at the tail end of feudal Japan (1868). The game blends samurai-era atmosphere with tactical, party-based combat that borrows a little of the flair of titles like Baldur’s Gate 3: characters have unique abilities, environment and technology affect encounters, and party composition and interpersonal dynamics matter to outcomes.
The narrative follows Tokugawa’s spymaster recruiting rōnin Satoru and Akira to protect a mysterious boy with dangerous powers. Choices in the story alter playthroughs. There isn’t a final release date yet, but a demo is available on Steam so you can try the game now.
Key Points
- Set in 1868 during the end of feudal Japan, with a conflict between Tokugawa forces and the modernising army of Emperor Mutsuhito.
- Turn-based tactical combat with party synergy and environment/technology interactions—invokes a Baldur’s Gate 3-style depth.
- Characters have distinct abilities, personalities and motivations; team chemistry affects success in missions.
- Story choices influence how the game unfolds and can change outcomes.
- A free demo is currently available on Steam; full release date not announced.
Context and Relevance
If you enjoyed the aesthetic and samurai setting of Ghost of Tsushima but favour tactical, party-driven RPGs, Shadow of the Road sits at that sweet spot. It taps into growing player interest for historically inspired Japanese settings while adding meaningful party tactics and choice-driven narrative elements. For indie games on PC, a playable demo signals the developer is keen to get early feedback and build momentum ahead of a full launch.
Why should I read this?
Because you can boot the demo right now and see if the mash-up of samurai vibes and tactical party combat scratches that specific itch. It’s a handy heads-up if you care about narrative choice, character builds and a late-feudal Japan setting — and it’s quicker than waiting for the full release to judge whether it deserves your time (or cash).