Thursday, 21 February 2013

Worth a Look - February 2013

The first Worth a Look of the year and it's all about arcade nostalgia, some of which comes in an unusual form.

Capcom's Arcade Cabinet

Developer:Capcom
Publisher:Capcom
Platforms:XBLA, PSN
Price:400MSP/£3.99 per pack
Demo available:Yes

I saw the logo for Capcom's Arcade Cabinet about a month ago and guessed what it would be. When the first videos appeared it looked like the classic arcade manufacturer was trying to do single-handedly what Atari, Konami, Intellivision, Krome and of course Microsoft, failed to do as a joint venture with the ill-fated retro gaming service Game Room, but it's actually something more akin to the Vintage Collections Sega have been putting out recently. Basically, if you loved old Capcom arcade games like 1942, Black Tiger, Side Arms and many, many more, then Arcade Cabinet gives you access to them either individually or in packs of three. They are promising to release new packs on a regular basis and the first few offerings are probably better than most of what was on Game Room anyway. The interface is elegant and and emulation seems spot on. If legal emulation is your thing (and it ought to be), then check it out on your Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3.




Arcadecraft


Developer:FireBase
Publisher:Microsoft
Platforms:XBox Live Indie Games
Price:240MSP
Demo available:Yes

One of my many fantasies as a kid was owning my own arcade, along with being the lead singer of a heavy metal band, being a movie star, being a pro wrestler and being a ninja. Now, thanks to FireBase, we can all live out that fantasy in Arcadecraft. If you've every played Theme Park or Railroad Tycoon, you'll have a pretty good idea of what this game is about. Buy machines, lay out your arcade, alter settings for price, difficulty, etc and make your business a success. Sadly, although FireBase went to the effort of dreaming up fake manufacturer's and machines, you cannot actually play any of them, just profit from them. It's still fun, but I feel that extra step could have made this amazing.

Super House of Dead Ninjas


Developer:
Megadev
Publisher:
Adult Swim Games
Platforms:
PC (Steam)
Price:
£4.99
Demo available:
No

Based on a Flash game of the same name, Super House of Dead Ninja fast-paced 2D platform beat 'em up that begs you to have another go when it inevitably beats you.  You play the part of the Crimson Ninja, who must make her way down through the randomly generated floors before the time (30 seconds per check point) runs out. It's a combination that would have made it a very successful arcade machine. It's also one of many indie games out there that strives to look retro, whilst ultimately doing things that could not have been done in the implied era. It's brisk, challenging, graceful, gory and would not have looked out of place in an arcade 25 years ago. Although there is technically no demo on Steam, you can still play the Flash version here.


MTW

Friday, 15 February 2013

Top 10 beat 'em ups

Before I begin this top 10, I am going to preface it by saying I know purists would say fighting games and brawlers are two separate genres; Fatal Fury is a fighting game, while Double Dragon is a brawler. However, back in the day, any game with fist fighting in it was known as a beat 'em up and here are my favourite 10:

Kung-Fu Master


Kung-Fu Master was the first beat 'em up I ever played that pitched the player against waves of enemies, as opposed to one-on-one.  Despite being based on the Jackie Chan film Wheels on Meals (or Spartan X as it was known in Japan), it actually played out very similar to Bruce Lee's film Game of Death, with each floor being guarded by a different boss.  I always remember hearing people talk about what the boss was on the final levels, but I don't think I ever saw past the Man of Brute Strength on floor 3, so I never knew if those rumours were true.

World Heroes


World Heroes was one of many games designed to cash in on the success of Street Fighter II. While it never did anything to set itself apart from Capcom's classic, I've always been rather fond of it. The characters were generally a little nuttier than those in the early versions of SF2, which was always part of the appeal. Plus, when the Street Fighter cabinets were crowded, this was always a nice alternative.

Favourite character: Hanzo (sorry, you have Street Fighter II to blame for that).

Power Stone 


The first of three Capcom games in this list, Power Stone was an arena fighting game quite unlike any other. The game felt like some kind of crazy mix of a Jackie Chan film, with characters bounding over tables and chairs, as well as hurling anything they could pick up at their opponent, and Power Rangers, which each character capable of powering up into typically Japanese super heroes. The ability to power up was reliant on being able to beat three different coloured gems out of your opponent, then collect them before they did. Matches were frantic games of cat and mouse, often times extracting the gems was by no means a guaranteed victory.

Favourite character: Wang Tang

Guilty Gear II 


When I first saw Guilty Gear X, it had been a couple of years since I had played a 2D beat 'em up and after feeling disappointed by Street Fighter 3, I loved how completely out there Guilty Gear was. I can't pretend I understood anything about the game, from the out-there character designs to the multitude of meters, but it looked wonderful and felt like a much more exciting direction for the old genre.

Favourite character: Jam

Tekken 3 


If you have to pick a point where the arcade first started to show signs of losing the battle to home machines, it was when the original Sony PlayStation came along. I originally played Tekken 3 on a PlayStation and it was probably better than the arcade version. It's also generally considered to be the best game in Namco's legendary series. I've played all but the latest Tekken game and I have to say I don't think any of the later games better this instalment.

Favourite character: Paul Phoenix.

Virtua Fighter 5 


Sega's original Virtua Fighter was a ground breaking game, but once Tekken came along it kinda felt a little stiff in comparison. However, during the life of the series Virtua Fighter has stood out as a solid, deep and brilliantly balanced fighting game.

Favourite character: Lau Chan

Final Fight 


After Street Fighter, Final Fight is Capcom's biggest beat 'em up.  Like Golden Axe it featured a co-op mode that was enhanced by the differences between the characters.  I was a Cody player at the time and because of the bizarre universe Capcom games occupy, that continued in Street Fighter Alpha 3 years later.

Favourite character: Cody.

King of Fighters series 


SNK gave us two great fighting game series, Fatal Fury and King of Fighters, but as good as they both have been over the years, I feel I can only give one a place in this list, so it has to be King of Fighters. Now in its 13th iteration, King of Fighters' tag-team combat set it apart when it first appeared and is still a big part of its appeal.

Favourite team: Terry Bogard, Mai Shiranui and Yuri Sakazaki.

Soul Calibur II 


Of all the 3D fighting games spawned by Virtua Fighter, my absolute favourite is Soul Calibur II. It was the third game in the series and arguably does not add anything that wasn't in Soul Calibur, but I think some of the new characters were interesting. One of my previous employers had an Xbox running Soul Calibur II in the canteen, which was a hugely popular break and lunchtime distraction. Myself (played as Mitsurugi) and one of my mates (playing as Knightmare) were particularly keen on playing the game as methodically as possible, rather than just bashing the buttons in the vain hope of winning. Our long, drawn-out matches were really tense and punctuated by the occassional decisive blow making it through the others defences. Great times.

Favourite character: Mitsurugi

Street Fighter series


I don't know precisely what it is that makes me come back to Street Fighter time and time again, but I know my urge to play it has barely waned in two decades.  My favourite iterations are Super Street Fighter II Turbo, Street Fighter III 3rd Strike, Street Fighter Alpha 3 and Super Street Fighter IV.  Each one has something different about them that makes it possible to enjoy them all equally, without feeling as those the older games have become antiquated.

Favourites characters (because I can't just choose one): Blanka, Ryu, Cody, Makoto, and... oh I'll stop there.

Sunday, 10 February 2013

Movie Review: Wreck-It Ralph 2D

I've been talking about Disney's movie homage to the days of arcade gaming, Wreck-it Ralph, since last autumn, but thanks to the differences in international release schedules, it's only just opened here in the UK. Yesterday, the wife, kids and I decided to go and see it.

Wreck-It Ralph wears its main plot thread right on its sleeve. At Litwak's Arcade, a TobiKomi Fix-It Felix Jr cabinet has been entertaining young gamers for three decades. Every day kids put in their quarters, watch the movie's titular hero, Ralph, smash up the Nicelanders' building, then proceed take control of the game's titular hero, Felix, to repair all the damage. When you complete the level, the inhabitants of the Niceland building grab Ralph, hurl him off the top of the building and the whole thing starts again — just like every great arcade game from the late 70s and early 80s. But bad guy, Ralph, doesn't want to be the bad guy any more, a feeling that's only amplified by the game's 30th anniversary.

Who says it's lonely at the top?
You see, much like Disney's other big video game inspired movie franchise, Tron, the characters inside all of the arcade machines at Litwak's are alive and much like yet another Disney franchise, Toy Story, when there are no players around, the game characters get up and live out a secret, alternative life, free from the rules of their actual game. Furthermore, and for reasons best not explored too deeply, these data people are able to move between games, courtesy of a circuit breaker to which all of their cabinets' power cables are connected. It is by this conceit that older gamers will get their geek and nostalgia overload.

Game Central Station or a circuit breaker to you and me
Any self-respecting arcade throwback will delight in pointing out all of the real arcade machines and their characters, as they enter and exit the train station-like circuit breaker. Q*Bert, Pac-Man, Tapper, Street Fighter II, Mario and Sonic are just some of the classic games and characters you'll see in this film, but they are far from the only ones. In fact, with the exception of Fix-It Felix Jr, Sugar Rush, Hero's Duty and Turbo Time, all of the games referenced in this film are (or in most cases, were) real games. While these references are only skin deep, some of them are so obscure that only the geekiest and oldest gamers in the audience will get them all. Basically, people like me. There's obviously a real love for arcade games here, but they don't over egg it, so non-gamers and kids who think gaming started with the Nintendo DS should still enjoy it. Nonetheless, there are a few gags that will ping right off the heads of most people. I doubt most people will get why Mr Litwak wears a referee shirt in the arcade. Not that all of the cameos are from games. Look out for a famous dubstep star DJing at one point, much like Daft Punk did in Tron Legacy.

Why is Zangief a bad guy? Communism? Is that what you're saying, Disney?
After attending Bad-Anon, a weekly support group for all of the games' villains, Ralph heads home to find the rest of the characters in his game are celebrating their anniversary. So Ralph crashes the party, much to their chagrin. After embarrassing himself, Ralph decides to prove he can be a hero by entering the hot new first person rail shooter, Hero's Duty, and winning a medal for heroism. And, with the setup complete, the movie begins its roller coaster ride through Hero's Duty and ends up in the Mario Kart-style, sickly sweet racing game, Sugar Rush. It's somewhat ironic that the movie actually spends most of its time inside the Sugar Rush universe, as Ralph tries to help an exiled racer named Vanellope von Schweetz finally win her first race.

A mixed-up racing kart for a mixed up film

In terms or subplots and supporting character development, there's actually a lot going on here, most of which is rather shallow and fails to really explore any of the issues they raise. This is partly due to the fact that, like a typical arcade game, there's very little time for the audience to catch their breath, as they are whisked along from set piece to set piece. The one that does work quite well is Vanellope's glitch, which presents itself like a combination between a nervious tick and epilepsy. This cute little character (voiced by Sarah Silverman) is shunned by the other racers because of her affliction, only for it to work in her favour towards the end. As the parents of an autistic child, this resonated with the wife and I, who know first hand both the highs and lows of having such a disability.

Overall, there's none of the depth of your typical Pixar or Studio Ghibli film here, but despite all the gaming references and shoe-horned branding, Wreck-It Ralph does have a bigger heart than, say Shrek, Madagascar or Ice Age. And it's certainly a class above the vast majority of kids CG animated movies. If, like me, you're an ageing gamer with young kids, you and your kids are bound to enjoy it, but I fear some people will be put off by the one-two punch of frequent gaming references in the first act and the multitude of sub-plots competing for attention for the rest of the film.

Oh and one last thing, my son has told me I can no longer eat Clyde when I play Pac-Man. Thanks, Disney.
MTW

Friday, 1 February 2013

Classic of the Month - Neo Turf Masters

Manufacturer:SNK
Developer:Nazca
Genre:Sports
Board:NeoGeo MVS
Year:1996

Here on Arcade Throwback, I talk a lot about blowing things up in shoot 'em ups or knocking street punks about in beat 'em ups, but rarely do I talk about the more sedate side of arcade gaming, like golf game Neo Turf Masters on the SNK Neo Geo system.

I first played it with a couple of college friends in an arcade in my home town. In was one of the games on a Neo Geo MVS that also contained Art of Fighting and Metal Slug. The arcade in question was very much focussed on fruit machines; the only other game cabinet I can remember was Street Fighter II Hyper Fighting, although I feel sure there must have been others. Whatever is the case, there was not a lot of choice. I can't remember who suggested playing Neo Turf Masters (I'm trying to recall a singular event from nearly two decades ago), but I have a feeling it was the same friend who had introduced me to Microprose Golf on the Commodore Amiga five years earlier. Now I'm no sports fan, not football, not rugby, not cricket, not motorsports, not snooker and certainly not golf, but for a while in 1991 I was hooked on Microprose Golf; Neo Turf Masters not only looked a lot nicer than that earlier game, but being an arcade game, it was a whole lot more accessible too.

Obviously real golf is a very pedestrian game and Nazca didn't scrimp on content. The game features four fictional 18-hole courses, each in a different country (Germany, Japan, America and Australia). So, in order to make it work in the fast paced, 20p gobbling environment of an arcade, Nazca streamlined all the aiming and club selection and even added lives, which they called holes. Your hole count starts at three, if you finish the course on par you lose a hole and bogeys take two, so as you can imagine you could be facing the continue countdown pretty quickly. In order to progress you had to score Eagles or Albatrosses, which did not take away any lives. It was simple, but effective and meant skilled players could actually have a pretty full complete golf experience. Even though the game auto-aimed and auto-selected clubs, there was enough of an error margin with things like variable wind and slopes made it as tough as any other sports game.

Visually this is as good as it gets. As you rotate the view the links moves in several parallax layers, which meant everything moved in parallel, rather than panning a fixed bitmap. The golfer himself is digitised, with some very detailed animation. As I watched the YouTube video below, a full 17 years after I first played the game, I was as impressed as I was then. It's testament to to the power of the Neo Geo hardware.


MTW