Showing posts with label Sonic the Hedgehog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sonic the Hedgehog. Show all posts

Monday, 7 July 2014

No Game New Year: Half Way Through with Sonic 2! See what I did there?


Hi there!

Once again, I haven’t posted for a while, largely for girlfriend-related reasons though I have to say that I needed to give myself some time to play the games as well!

So we’re at the half-way point of the challenge, and so far I’ve been doing OK. By that I mean I’ve managed to get through the last six months without buying a game or any DLC of any kind, and any games I’ve acquired during this time have been absolutely for free. And as we approach the back half of the year, I’ll take this opportunity to reflect on the challenge, and how it’s made me approach games:

It’s no secret to anyone who knows me that it is easy for me to fall in to the trap of buying games habitually. The huge stack of Xbox games, both original and 360, in my bedroom is testament to that. This year I’ve had to make a conscious effort not to do this. And to be perfectly honest it’s been a lot easier for me than I dared to hope at the start of the year!

This is largely because of the new generation of consoles that are coming out. The line-up for the new generation is the Playstation 4, the Xbox One and the Wii U, and I don’t own any of them. Therefore I can’t be tempted to buy games for them! Not that there are many to get at this point, and most of the ones you can buy were available on previous-gen as well. I’ve spent some time thinking about which one I’m going to get when I am allowed to do so, but that’s a whole different discussion for another time.

When I buy games, I tend to go for the ones on special offer. GAME – the main retailer for games in the UK – often has deals on that mean you can get 4 games for £20, or something similar. The games are usually pre-owned, but that’s never bothered me since I usually buy games because I want them, not because they’re a new release. I’ve got something like 60 games for my 360, and I think only 3 of them I’ve bought new or even close to release. (Both XCOM games and GTAV, if you want to know.) So I walk into a shop, see what games I like and then go ahead and buy them if I can make a good deal out of it. Because of the challenge, I’ve not been going in to game stores, and I actually find it more of a faff to order physical copies online, so it’s not been particularly hard to avoid!

Where the challenge has presented me with, well, a challenge is when it comes to actually thinking about the games I own. I know I’ve been a bit spotty with this over the last few months, but the original idea behind the blog was to post updates about what I think of the games I’ve been playing and whether or not I want to keep them, this that and the other. And I’ve seen some of the other guys playing games on their posts and getting through a significantly higher number of games than I am, and I’m wondering if I should be doing more. Not playing more games; we all have different schedules so if I don’t have time to play as many as I’d like, or as many as other people do, then it’s not really a problem. But I sometimes ask myself whether I should be doing more to say how I’m getting on.

What I’ve been doing, then, is while I play the game, I think about what I want to say about it. Not just for the sake of the challenge, though. I think it’s quite a good thing that, given how much of my time I spend playing video games, it’s good to ask myself why I’m actually enjoying it – and if other people want to know, then that’s fine by me. So I mutter to myself passages that eventually end up in the blog, in the hope that someone’s going to read it and find it interesting…

Case in point: This week’s game.

 
Sonic the Hedgehog 2

This game will always be very special to me. Back in 1994, I got my first Sega Megadrive, (Genesis,) and I’d been after one for literally years. I remember I was 8 years old, and my Mom bought me a Megadrive with Sonic 2 on it. It wasn’t my first ever game; we’d had an Acorn Archimedes computer before that and we’d had plenty of games for it. But the Megadrive was mine, and so was Sonic 2. I played it almost non-stop until the end of the school year when I was bought another couple of games – more on that later. I come to own it now from the Sega Megadrive Ultimate Collection that I’ve spoken about before, and I thought 20 years later, now was the time to give it another play-through.

Turns out I’d forgotten two very important things about the game. The first is how much fun Sonic is! And the second was how hard those old games are.

So Sonic 2 is a great game, it really is. Side-scrolling platformers were hardly uncommon 20 years ago, but few games did it so well. It encouraged speed by having Sonic move incredibly fast for a video game, but punished carelessness by throwing spikes and pit traps in your way. The levels were designed in vastly different styles, each with their own gimmicks, traps and enemies – but with enough similarity to tie it all together. The fact that there were different enemies on each level was actually not that common, if I remember rightly; most of the games I remember playing at the time used the same or similar enemies across multiple levels. The sound track is nothing short of iconic. I know that word should not be used lightly, but just do a quick search on YouTube for the number of people who’ve done videos of Bass Guitar covers of the Chemical Plant Zone theme.[1] And most importantly of all, whether you got through the game or not were entirely up to you.

“Well, no shit,” I hear you cry. “You’re in control of the game; of course it’s up to you whether or not you beat it!” Yes… but it’s not that simple. You have a lot of control over what happens in the game for a few reasons:

  1. Sonic 2 was a competently-made game. That means that it had been play-tested so the dev team knew it all worked properly, and there were no game-breaking bugs or glitches that would screw you over. That’s not to say there weren’t any bugs or glitches in there at all, in fact some of them were quite beneficial, but none of them would harm your progress, and they weren’t even taken out for the game compilation I’m playing it on! Thankfully most of us remember a time before there was scope for games being patched for bugs, so the developers really had to work hard to make sure that everything worked. They didn’t always get it right, but they got a lot more right than many of their contemporaries manage these days!
  2. The game wasn’t designed to be played for you. There were no button prompts, no “Hit the Crawl from the rear or you’ll just bounce off him” or “Jump to avoid these spikes/that pit trap.” If you avoided the traps, it was because you saw them coming. If you destroyed a badnik without getting hurt, it was because you’d considered the best way to approach it. If you managed to beat the bosses, it was because you’d analysed their attack patterns and developed your counter-attack from that. Or more likely, you’d buggered it up fifty times before you got any of it right – which made the game a challenge, but not unfair. There was a lot of trial and error, and the sense of accomplishment from finally getting it right was where a lot of the longevity of these games comes from. I’m still playing it 20 years later!

It was quite strange, playing it through again. Those muscle reactions that I thought long gone were coming back to me as I played my way through the early levels of the game, only to get stuck later on because I kept dying. Rarely from a Badnik (evil robot.) No, I’d always get trapped, or fall down a pit, or drown or something or other. I remember finding the game a lot easier when I was younger and I found myself wondering, are games getting easier in the last few generations? Or am I getting rubbish at them in my old age?

It turns out the answer doesn’t relate to either of those things. In actual fact, when I played this game when I was 8 years old, I had all the cheat codes to it and could select whichever level I want, and was also able to change into Super Sonic any time I wanted as well. So I had plenty of opportunity to practise those harder levels. I actually can’t remember, even in my younger days, playing the game through from one end to the other more than a couple of times, though I did complete the game several times by cheating. I can’t remember any of the codes now, even if I wanted to cheat – though I do remember you input the codes by playing certain tracks from the Sound Test in a particular order. I don’t think they’d work now even if I wanted to do it, because I did play back some of the tracks and my 360 seems to be a lot less happy about doing this than my old Megadrive was. (It crashed after a couple of tracks.)

That being said, Sonic 2 is also a lot harder than today’s contemporary games because here you have a fail state. You start with three lives. You can gain more, but if you ever lose them, you have to start all over again. This just doesn’t happen in modern games, and rightly so, because modern games are sometimes quite a lengthy procedure that would not survive having the whole thing de-railed because you’d died too many times. But in the early games, those lives were your lifeline. You had to hang on to them, and try not to lose them.

Because lose them I do; usually either to aforementioned traps, or boss battles. Some of the latter are ridiculously easy, some are insanely hard, and the last boss battle is borderline impossible. I’ve fallen down on the last couple of bosses several times, and even though it is frustrating, I don’t particularly mind. Let’s be honest; this is what these games are about. Smashing your way through levels, exploring them fully to find their secrets – they will give you cool stuff but you have to earn it – praying that you’re still in good enough shape to battle the end-of-level boss, and then when you’re exhausted and your concentration is slipping, have one last duel to the death between you and the final boss. Whatever happens at that point, it is a fitting end…

I managed to beat the game last Sunday night, and allowed myself a small smile of overcoming the challenge, as hitherto I always fell down on the last couple of levels. But I would like to make a few comments on the game itself, how it is different from the other Sonic games, and what I think of the mechanics involved with it.

For a start, Sonic 2 is a very good sequel. Over the last few generations, we’ve been seeing more and more sequels that haven’t been as effective. On one hand, some sequels iterate rather than innovate, basically releasing the same game 4 or 5 times. *cough* Dynasty Warriors *cough* On the other hand, some games take it too far the other way, and release games where the mechanics and design are so different that it is barely recognisable as part of the franchise. (Less often, though I think some of the more recent Sonic games are guilty of this!)

To contrast, Sonic 2 is basically Sonic 1, but better. He can still do everything he could do before, in the same way – but now he can do more things. Here’s a few alterations to what had gone before that made Sonic 2 an improvement on Sonic 1:

First, the Dash Attack. Sonic’s been able to do this for so long, sometimes it’s hard to remember that it wasn’t always the case. You could now duck on the floor and charge a ground-based spin attack, whereas before you had to do it from a run. This was very useful for opening some item boxes and hitting some of the enemies where precision was required. It’s no surprise that they kept this one!

Second, the Special Stage. This was a massive improvement over the rotating special stage from Sonic One, where one wrong move would take you straight back into the main game. For a start, it was much easier to get to – get 50 rings and find a Star Post, then jump through the ring of Stars that appears there. A challenge, certainly, but better than praying you still had enough rings left at the end of the level. And then there was the Special Stage itself. The sort-of-3D graphics looked amazing for the time, and the setting made the age-old premise of ‘collect the good stuff (rings) and avoid the bad stuff (mines)’ a lot more interesting. Plus, if you did muck it up, the game would drop you back in the same level next time, rather than move it on. This was good because some of the seven stages were actually really hard!

Third, Super Sonic. This was your reward for getting all seven Chaos Emeralds out of the Special Stage. If at any time after this you collected 50 rings and hit the jump button, Sonic turns yellow and becomes Super Sonic. I remember Sonic The Comic (published in the early-to-late 90s, I got most of them up to 1999,) portraying Super Sonic as an out-of-control demon, super-strong, invulnerable and very, very angry. The Super Sonic you control in the game is pretty much like that except he can’t fly. There were no morality issues either; in pretty much every game before 1995, you were either the good guy, or in a very small number of cases, you weren’t. Sonic, Super or otherwise, has always been the good guy and rightly so. Super Sonic is faster than Sonic, won’t take any damage that would normally result in losing your rings and can jump higher. But he’s less accurate to control, which is not good during some of the precision platforming you have to employ late in the game. Also, getting him was something of a blessing and a curse – he drains your rings for every second he’s in the game, and there’s no way to turn him off short of letting him drain them all. And it was almost impossible not to do it because the trigger was the jump button. Try getting through any Sonic game without jumping and see what happens! This was all well and good, except that the best way to collect extra lives was to collect 100 rings, and playing as Super Sonic prevented this. So, the individual levels were easier, but the end of the game was harder as it allowed less room for error.

Finally, Tails/2 player Co-op. Sadly, I think they missed a trick here. True, Tails became one of the most famous characters of the franchise, and the idea of a fox with two tails that can fly is a good one. But as there was no way to make him fly in the game, it didn’t make the slightest bit of difference whether you played him or Sonic. This undermined what could potentially have been a great innovation into the game, allowing Tails to reach harder-to-reach areas. The Co-op mode was, I suppose, a good way to allow a younger player to play with a more experienced player, since Tails couldn’t die or lose any rings. But the second player is shut out of the last couple of levels since Tails doesn’t appear in them, for the story’s sake as much as anything else. You could, of course, allow the AI to control tails, but this rarely helped. His role seemed quite reactive; i.e. if a Badnik hurt Sonic, Tails would attack it. If Sonic lost his rings, Tails would pick them up. He was no use at all on the Special Stage, as he would follow Sonic and his reactions were delayed by about half a second, which meant that he would more often than not run into the mines you were trying to avoid! Most of this was fixed for Sonic 3 though.

So, to conclude, a great game, and I was happy to have the opportunity to play it through again. I think I will cover Streets of Rage 2 at some point as well, but for now, I’m going to decide what to play next in amongst the multitude of things I’ve got to do…


[1] Then do another, much longer search for one who actually got it right…

Monday, 24 March 2014

No Game New Year part 11: Fallout Brotherood of Steel and Sega Mega Drive Ultimate Collection


I think I’m going to have to admit defeat and call it a day with Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel. It was getting to the point where I wouldn’t even want to put my PS2 on for thought of having to deal with that asinine game, and I found myself thinking: Time to move on. Play something else. And get rid of that game.

(If and when I get rid of my games that I don’t play anymore, it will probably be all at the same time. In the UK there is a service called Music Magpie that will take some old games and CDs etc off your hands for a relatively small amount of money – but they will take them, and if there’s more than 20 items, the delivery is free. That’s how I’ll probably sell my games when the time comes. That’s also why I’ll hang on to the game long enough for me to give it another go if the mood takes me.)

So here are just a few things that are wrong with it:

The biggest problem I’ve had so far has been with the health recovery system. You either use Stim Packs, which will restore roughly ¼ of your health, or you can stand still for about 5 minutes and your health will recover automatically. The former is by far the quicker option, but if you do this, you will burn though your health packs very quickly and they need to be saved for the bosses. The latter sounds great until you start doing it after every 5 enemies or so. They drain a lot of your health if they hit you, which of course they will. I spent ages standing around waiting for my health to recover, and it would have been incredibly boring had I not had my laptop on at the same time and spent the downtime watching videos on Youtube. What I did before Youtube I don’t know. I certainly wouldn’t want to have to play this game and have nothing else to do!

Also, some of the set-pieces are very lazy. Quite early on in the game you have to escape from a cave that is crumbling around you and rocks are falling down on to you from overhead. The idea is to get you to hurry up while you’re leaving, which you do, until you realise that not a single one of these rock falls – which occur once every six seconds or so with EXACTLY THE SAME ANIMATION – has even the remotest chance of hitting you. All it’s actually doing is getting in the way of your field of view. Granted, given the size of the level, having any of them hit you would have made escape almost impossible, but it could and should have been handled a lot better than this.

Aside from this, the game is just outright dull. Other than the main questline, the quests are absolutely ridiculous (I can’t imagine that a prostitute in post-apocalyptic America is going to be too worried about the whereabouts of her cat, even if it is called Mr Pussy,) the characters aren’t likeable by any stretch of the imagination and the combat is repetitive and boring. I imagine the game would be more fun played in 2-player co-op,[1] but what isn’t? I bought it on the strength of the Fallout games – which up until then had been very good – but in hindsight; I’d have done better leaving this one alone.
 
Time for some fun...
 
Sega Mega Drive Ultimate Collection
This is a collection of games I’ve got on an Xbox360 disc of about 40 games for the Sega Mega Drive, better known in the rest of the world as the Sega Genesis. I owned a Mega Drive years ago – and some of these games - , from when I was eight up until about nineteen, when I traded it in for an Xbox. (This was 2005 and retro gaming was HUGE in the UK at this point.) I figured, in the spirit of the challenge, that it would be a good idea to play through some of these.
Now, some of these old Mega Drive games are very hard to complete. On at least one of them, it actually can’t be done (because it is a Tetris-style puzzle game and will carry on indefinitely until you lose.) Some of them are astonishingly difficult to manage. And some of them are simply better games than others. While I like enough of the games to want to keep the actual disk, in some cases all I will be looking for is the Achievement Points for it.
Here are the games I’ve won achievement points on so far, and what I had to do to get them:
  • Alex Kidd: Collect 1,000 in currency
  • Altered Beast: Collect 100,000 points or higher on the first level
  • Bonanza Brothers: Reach 40,000 points on the first level
  • Columns: Get 20,000 on Easy mode
  • Comix Zone: Complete the first episode
  • Doctor Robotnik’s Mean Bean Machine: Complete the game
  • Ecco: Talk to another dolphin
  • Fatal Labyrinth: Progress to the 5th level of the labyrinth
  • Golden Axe: Collect 20 magic power-ups
  • Kid Chameleon: Collect Maniaxe
  • Shinobi III: Complete the 1st level without using continues
  • Sonic Spinball: Get 10,000,000 points on the first level
  • Sonic the Hedgehog: Obtain a Chaos Emerald
  • Streets of Rage: Complete 1st level using all 3 characters.
  • Super Thunder Blade: Score over 1,500,000 points on the first level
So, without further ado, here are the games I’ve been playing and how I managed with them:
 
Streets of Rage
I’d actually already got the achievement for this, as playing through the first level with all three characters isn’t actually all that hard. However, as far as brawlers are concerned, the Streets of Rage series was as good as they ever were or ever would be. In fact the second game is my favourite game of all time. I hadn’t completed it though, (at least, not on normal difficulty) and I’ve got this thing where I have to play through all the games in the series in order, so I thought I’d start with this one.
Streets of Rage, while not superbly balanced, includes a surprising amount of strategy for a brawler. But I guess that’s what games were like back in the early 90s. In order for it to be a challenge, the game was designed in such a way that you couldn’t just button-mash. You had to think about what you were doing, and how you’d tackle the various different enemies, particularly the bosses.
For example, at the end of level 2, you come across a guy with Wolverine-style claws. The way to deal with him is NEVER to jump, because as soon as you do he rushes at you with a slash and knocks you out of the air. Instead, approach him from above if you can, and get him in a hold. To maximise the damage output, flip over him while holding him, do the first couple of moves of the hold combo then throw him.
To deal with the big fat guy who breathes fire on level 4, you have to make sure you’re at the opposite height of the screen to where he is (i.e. if he’s low, be at the high end,) intercept him from behind as he’s breathing fire and do the hold combo. But whatever you do, don’t try to throw him or he’ll fall on top of you and you’ll damage yourself.
By far the hardest enemy in the game is Mona and Lisa, two fighters who in this version are re-skins of the playable character Blaze. If these two hit you, it will hurt – more than a third of your health bar will disappear – and the only way to hit them is to use your back attack. If you try to attack them head on, they will simply jump away from you. This requires a lot of skill to manage, and a character with a good back attack.
And then there are the characters themselves: Adam, Axel and Blaze, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. The game purports to help you out with this on the selection screen; Adam is strong and has a good jump attack but is not very quick, Axel is strong and quick but doesn’t have very good jump attacks, and Blaze is quick and has jump attacks but is not very strong. But they all have different things about them that you can only discover through playing the game yourself – or reading a wiki. In my case it was a mixture of the two.
My favourite character is Adam, but I think this has a lot to do with the fact that he doesn’t appear as a playable character in Streets of Rage 2 which I owned years ago. I always enjoyed playing the different character. He’s good enough to take out most of the enemies in the game, but sadly not quite quick enough to get out of their way when they’re doing their fast attacks, and I tend to die before I get to the end of the game.
Axel is quite average and was great in the second game but in this one he’s lacking in ranged attacks. He has to be right up close before he can do any significant amount of damage, and this is the case for his jump attack and back attack as well, making him almost useless for some of the later bosses. It’s kind of ironic that the character that was the face of the game was also the least useful.
I actually finished the game with Blaze, in the end. She’s quick enough to dodge most attacks and she’s got good jump and back attacks as well. Her regular attacks are less powerful but this is a small price to pay because you just need to do more of them. Also – and this is where some balance issues come in to it – she has the best throws out of the three of them as well. So she’s fast; useful; and if you get close enough she can do a huge amount of damage. She’s actually therefore the best character in the game.
The game also lets you choose a ‘Bad’ ending. The idea of different endings wasn’t unknown for the time, and you’d usually have to do something extra to get the good one – play on a higher difficulty level, collect all the Chaos Emeralds and such – but in Streets of Rage, you actually have to work harder for the bad one. At the end of the game, you have to choose whether you want to become Mr X’s right hand man, and if you decide that you do, he drops you down and you have to play the last I think three levels again. You then have to beat the last boss anyway, which is surprisingly easy. I’ve seen both endings; I completed the game years ago and got the bad ending on Easy mode, but for this play-through I wanted to play it on normal and get the good ending. It was satisfying to beat it again after so long!
 
Bonanza Brothers
This game appears to be about two brothers who steal things from various guarded locations, and what has to be one of the first games with a ‘Stealth’ mechanic. You could hide from your enemies, or shoot them, which in actual fact would stun them for around 5 seconds. The levels were timed and there would be a bonus in your score for beating the level quickly. Time-based scoring like this was quite common in those days, I think.
I never owned this game on the Mega Drive and to be honest, I’m not enjoying it too much now. The controls are quite clunky and the theme is something I’m struggling to care about. I might give it another go at some point, but now that I’ve got the achievement for it, it won’t be any time soon.
 
Alien Storm
Another brawler. Don’t be fooled by the fact that all the characters have guns; they are short ranged energy blasters that don’t go more than a few feet. The idea behind the game is that aliens have descended on to earth and are disguising themselves as bins and post boxes, and you have to kill them all with your weapons. Or, as is commonly the case with Mega Drive games, mash the B button. The A button does the usual super-attack, but the C button is what sets this one apart from regular brawlers. Rather than jumping up, this one actually makes jump forward, which you can combine into a quick attack in the form of a forward roll. It’s useful, provided you understand where you’ll end up and make sure there are no enemies there, and quite a bit different from the usual jump attacks. But you do find yourself missing the notion of a jump keeping you out of harms way for a valuable second while you decide what to do next. The game also has ‘first person’ sections, where you control a crosshair to aim at various different aliens coming at you and shoot crates to get power-ups.
 
This game is OK but not as good as Streets of Rage. For one thing, the things that are supposed hide alien life – bins, etc – are things that in any other game you’d smash to get an item; trying to do so in this game almost always results in an alien appearing out of it, taking away any element of surprise. You also need to collect energy for your guns, which is a peculiar thing to put in a brawler because that potentially means you could derail the whole game by running out of ammo. It is also very hard. I can’t actually get the achievement – I have to make it to the end of the third level without dying even once. Something always manages to kill me, either by ganging up on me to the point where I can do nothing but use a super-attack to deal with it, or by being a horribly hard boss fight.
But, for a game that was obviously designed for arcade, this is not too bad at all. It is fun, if a little frustrating, and it’s nice to have a slightly different take on what you would normally expect from a brawler. I’ll keep going at it until I get that achievement, but whether I’ll make it to the end I don’t know.
 
Dr Robotnik’s Mean Bean Machine
This is an absurd but surprisingly fun game using characters from the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise. (For those of you who don’t know, Dr Eggman was originally called Dr Robotnik. I don’t know why it was changed for the later games!) In fact, some of the characters who appear in the game were also from The Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog TV series, which I used to love when I was about 8 or 9 and for quite a long time afterwards! It is a tetris-like puzzle game, where you have to group four or more ‘Beans’ of the same colour in order to ‘free’ them.
What makes this game different is the adversarial nature of the game. The Scenario Mode pits you against a ladder of 12 different robots that are also playing the game, and the idea is to make them fill their playing field before they do. As soon as that happens, it’s game over, but there’s a twist: Each time you free a group of coloured beans, it creates a group of colourless “refugee” beans that drops on your opponent. These cannot be grouped in the usual way, and the only way to get rid of them is if they are next to a group that they are freeing. The more beans you get rid of in one shot – or the higher your combo – the more refugees are dropped on your opponent. Drop enough of them and you can knock them out straight away, though more likely you’ll be very disruptive to the combos they were planning. Of course, they can do the same to you, and trust me, they will…
The robots you fight are a colourful bunch, and feature Scratch, Grounder and Coconuts from The Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog amongst others. All the robots say something to you in a text-based format before their level begins, and I can’t help but wonder if the script-writer ever actually watched the show; most of the characters that feature here are devoid of their usual personalities in the game. They are all supposed to have different strategies and tactics in order to make life difficult for you, but to be honest, the only ones that gave me any significant amount of trouble were Dynamight (Level 7,) and Spike (Level 9.) The rest of them… well it wasn’t exactly easy, but when I won, I felt it was more to do with luck of the draw than skill. I actually beat Dr Robotnik on my first go.
The game also features a 2-player versus mode, which caused some horrific rows between me, my brother and some of my friends in my younger days! (Dropping a load of refugees on each other was never taken in good grace, and even now seems something of a ‘dick’ move.) I guess that can be fun if played in the spirit it was intended. There is also a training, or ‘free’ mode, which can be one or two players and does not feature refugees. I guess that could be fun too, but with Columns on the same disk, there’s not much point…
I had a lot of fun with this, but now that I’ve got the achievement (Complete the game,) I doubt I’ll be coming back to it any time soon.



[1] The only person who’d play this sort of thing with me is my sister, who doesn’t live with me anymore so we don’t see much of each other. If she is around, we’ve got much better games than this to play together.