Description
Supreme Duelist is at its best as a loose local stickman brawler where strange weapons, unstable arenas, and exaggerated physics create quick reversals. It is easy to share, though competitive balance is deliberately secondary to chaos.
Supreme Duelist Review
Supreme Duelist builds short fights from a virtual movement control, automatic weapon behavior, and physics that are only partly predictable. A round may end with a careful strike, an accidental fall, or both fighters being launched across the stage. That uncertainty gives the game its identity and makes local two-player matches particularly entertaining.
Weapons change more than appearance. Some reward keeping distance, others pull fighters together, create projectiles, or demand awkward timing. Arena hazards and destructible layouts add another variable, so adapting to the current combination matters more than memorizing a long move list.
Solo matches against computer opponents are useful practice, while survival and team variations broaden the rules. The minimal art keeps action readable even when effects fill the screen. It also means the experience depends heavily on enjoying repeated physics duels rather than narrative or detailed progression.
Weapon strength is uneven, edge collisions can decide rounds abruptly, and advertisements interrupt the free version. These are real limitations for serious competition but less damaging during casual play with a friend. Supreme Duelist succeeds as a compact party fighter: immediate, silly, and capable of producing memorable outcomes from very few controls.
Base Info
Official Sources
LumenPlays points players to official store and publisher pages where available. Use these links to review current pricing, availability, privacy details, and device requirements.
Screenshots
How to Play Supreme Duelist
Choose a mode, arena, and weapon, then use the on-screen control to move the stickman. Weapon attacks are tied to movement, direction, cooldowns, or automatic behavior depending on the item. Spend the opening seconds learning how the selected weapon swings or fires before rushing the opponent.
Keep the fighter's feet on stable ground and avoid backing toward pits or arena edges. A direct hit is useful, but pushing an opponent into a hazard can end a round faster. With ranged weapons, maintain space and change elevation to make return attacks harder.
With heavy melee weapons, approach after the opponent misses and use the recovery window. In local two-player mode, each player uses controls on one side of the same device. Team and survival modes may change the victory condition, so check whether the goal is elimination, endurance, or defeating multiple enemies.
Do not hold movement continuously during a collision; short corrections provide more control and reduce accidental falls. Test unfamiliar weapons against AI before relying on them in a close match.
Pros
- Excellent same-device multiplayer
- Weapons significantly change each duel
- Fast matches and immediate controls
- Physics create funny unscripted outcomes
Cons
- Weapon balance is intentionally uneven
- Physics can make results feel random
- Ads interrupt the free version
Beginner Tips
- Learn the current weapon motion before committing to the first attack.
- Stay away from arena edges unless you are deliberately forcing a ring-out.
- Use short movement adjustments during close collisions.
- Let an opponent miss with a heavy weapon, then attack during recovery.
- Practice unusual projectile weapons against AI before local matches.
FAQ
Does Supreme Duelist support local multiplayer?
Yes. Two players can fight on the same supported device using separate on-screen controls.
Are all weapons controlled the same way?
No. Their attacks, reach, movement, and cooldown behavior vary, so each requires some experimentation.
Is Supreme Duelist a serious competitive fighter?
It can be played competitively, but physics, hazards, and uneven weapons favor casual party play.
Can it be played alone?
Yes. Solo modes include battles against computer-controlled opponents and other challenge formats.