I'll start this post with a disclaimer: this game isn't emulated perfectly in MAME by a long shot, and while the original cabinet uses some buttons and a big gun handle-shaped analogue stick for controls, I had to make do with a Dual Shock 4 and jimmying together some controls that were pretty close to a modern first person shooter through trial and error. Since it would be unfair to comment on the quality of the game under these circumstances, consider this post as being for informational purposes only.
As far as I can tell, though, it's a pretty good attempt at bringing contemporary console first person shooters (circa 1999, when the game was released) to the arcade! I only played the single player mode, though it seems that it has both co-op and versus multiplayer modes, judging by the attract mode demos and the high score tables. Single player mode has you going through stages killing lots of enemy soldiers and robots. Sometimes you'll get to pick up a more powerful weapon, which is nice, too, and there's a fair few different kinds. Also, when you kill human enemies with an explosive weapon, they burst into chunks of meat, which is also nice.
The game's set in futuristic Siberia, and your enemies are a kind of generic bad guy army that takes vidual cues from both the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, though judging by some of the names of later stages seen on the highscore tables, it looks like aliens get involved later on, too. Visually, the game looks great: everything's huge and colourful and chunky, and there's cool propaganda posters on the walls too. The robot enemies are a bit boring, though, which is a shame as the human enemies look alright, despite being a bit generic. Though there was apparently a scrapped N64 port in the works, the whole time I was playing, the thought that ran through my mind was that it looked like a lot of western-developed Dreamcast games. Of course, it didn't get ported there, either.
As for how it plays, it's a mixed bag. I do like the linearity of the stages, and the fact that there's big red arrows telling you where to go, as something that's always frustrated me in single player FPSes is getting lost in the stages. I don't know why, but it always seems to happen! One thing I really didn't like though, is that there's quite a few bullet sponge enemies, and they only get more frequent as the stages go on. I only played until the fourth boss, and by then, just getting through each room was becoming laborious.
Though I was essentially playing it at half speed, thanks to a combination of the emulation being in its early days, and my laptop not particularly being a powerhouse (though I don't know if it runs faster on more powerful computers, or if we will just have to wait for the emulation to get slowly closer to perfection), I mostly enjoyed War: The Final Assault. It's colourful, there's explosions and stuff, and there aren't many arcade games like it. (Off the top of my head, I can think of Last Survivor, Outtrigger, and that Counterstrike arcade game?) Try it, I guess, see how you get on.
I love the Atari/Midway Voodoo 3DFX era arcade games from this time. People always talk up the Model 2 board, or the Namco System 22, but I think people should give the Midway Voodoo 3DFX board some love too.
ReplyDeleteGauntlet Legends is one of my favorite co-op games ever, NFL Blitz and NBA Showtime were awesome, and as an N64-owner back in the day, MACE The Dark Age was probably the best janky fighting game released for the console (the best outright was probably Fighter's Destiny, of course). I was so heartbroken when this game, as well as slick-looking fighter Tenth Degree, got cancelled because I was sure they would've been a blast on the N64. They both looked so cool in magazines! Plus, I'm sure Eurocom would've ported 'em after their job with Hydro Thunder, Gauntlet Legends and NBA Showtime too - they were MASTERS at crunching these Midway arcade games onto the N64 somehow. Its great to read an overview of it; I still love the presentation, but it lessens the blow to know it was kind of tedious.
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Besides Outtrigger and the other games you mentioned, I know Quake had a port for Japanese arcades (I think Taito did the conversion? It had a trackball controller and had a name like "Quake: Tournament Arcade"), and Taito DEFINITELY did an arcade game running on the Source Engine at some point around 2010 I think..... *looking it up*.... CYBER DIVER. That looks pretty cool.
I also just learned of an arcade game Taito did called Gun Buster (which is NOT based on the Gainax anime of the same name) while looking up that name and it seems interesting? It looks like an on-rails shooter with sprite scrolling, but apparently no it's an actual FPS of some kind. For arcades. In 1994. Huh.
Wow, cool post. I'd like to write like this too - taking time and real hard work to make a great article... but I put things off too much and never seem to get started. Thanks though. Arcade downtown toronto
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