Showing posts with label Sega Genesis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sega Genesis. Show all posts

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Who was the best player in NBA history? Lebron, Jordan, Kobe... no try Tom Chambers



With the NBA Finals getting started, it serves as a reminder to me of some of the old basketball titles that graced the early gaming consoles.  While there were some fun titles early on in the NES library for basketball fans, they were also rather generic and bland.  Eventually NBA Jam came to the arcades. While that game was a blast to play, it was a crazy 2 on 2 arcade style game that didn't really speak to a true basketball purist.

The Sega Genesis was the first console to make a legitimate attempt at creating a true NBA experience.  It did an updated version of 1989's PC game, Lakers vs Celtics and the NBA Playoffs.  Now the game did have it's shortcomings.  It only featured 8 NBA teams and 2 All-Star teams.  There was no season mode, so your only real option was to take a team and start in the Conference Semi-Final round of the playoffs with one of the teams they had available.


The real treat of the game was the actual gameplay.  It was a true 5 on 5 game with real rules, and no one jumping 30 feet in the air with the ball on fire. The coolest feature was that star players could perform signature moves if performed in certain areas of the court.  Michael Jordan had his air reverse, Clyde Drexler did his glide, Charles Barkley did a gorilla dunk.  While those were great, nothing was more brutal than Tom Chambers' triple pump slam.

Tom Chambers in his prime with the Phoenix Suns

While not nearly as respected as a Jordan or Barkley, Tom Chambers wasn't a slouch.  A 6' 10" power forward, Chambers was a 4 time All-star and has his jersey number retired by the Phoenix Suns.  He was an above average shooter for his size, and known for unleashing some powerful dunks from time to time.  However I have never seen him pull off the triple pump slam from just inside the 3 point line.

This was just after jumping nearly 20 feet and pumping the ball three times in mid-air

And that was the issue with Lakers vs Celtics, that move was just to easy to pull off.  Most of the other signature moves were much more difficult to pull off.  To pull off a move in the game you needed to shoot with the player on the correct area of the court.  Most required being somewhat close to the basket, but Chambers' signature dunk started just inside the three point line.

The only way to stop it was drawing a charging foul, but that was difficult to do consistently.  It was a fun way to trick a new player.  You could tell them they could have Jordan and the Bulls, while you play with the lowly Suns... then destroy them.

There were a few sequels to the game.  Bulls vs Lakers and Bulls vs Blazers.  Those were significant because they were among the first games to replace in game music, with in game commentary.  Giving those games a more realistic feel.  EA also did a similar game featuring the 1992 "Dream Team" playing internationally.
 

Friday, April 26, 2013

The Early Days of Mortal Kombat


In the early days of home console gaming all eyes were on Nintendo.  They seemed to have the winning formula for success in the early days, so developers didn't seem to challenge their rules.  While there were many great games out for the Nintendo and Super Nintendo, their strict policies on how violence was portrayed in games kept developers from pushing the envelope.  This policy made many developers to gear their games for children, and made the idea of games with adult themes very taboo.

How did Nintendo not find this good, wholesome fun for the family

The Mortal Kombat series was one that certainly didn't seek Nintendo's approval.  Debuting in 1992 with the original Mortal Kombat arcade game, the 2-dimensional fighting game made waves with it's realistic character models, and extremely violent content.  From the outset this made the series extremely popular.  And by 1995 there were two sequels to the hit out for arcades.

What made the game most shocking to most was the fact that instead of cartoonish characters, MK used real actors to create the models of each character.  Successful strikes against your opponents caused sprays of blood to shoot from their wounds.  At the end of each battle the loser stands dazed and the game proclaims "Finish Him."  From there each character has his or her own unique finishing move called a Fatality.  Mortal Kombat fatalities are gruesome animations of character dismemberment, or maiming.  Each of the three original arcade games had home console counterparts.

Mortal Kombat 3 arcade machine
  
The first two games were available on the SNES and Sega Genesis.  Most gamers remember the Genesis ports the best.  Although the game was toned down from the arcade version, a cheat code could be entered to unlock the blood and gore that the arcade version had.  The Super Nintendo was a different story all together.  Much of the game was altered, the blood was removed, many of the fatalities were altered to limit the violence, and even if you had the cheat codes the blood would be green.  This caused many gamers who didn't have access to a Genesis to cry foul. 

The third game was also ported to the Sony PlayStation.  The PS1 was a great system for the series to grow, and didn't have the same objections to the violent content that the earlier systems did.  The issue that fans had with the third installment was that many of the principal characters were replaced.  Raiden, Scorpion, Mileena, Kitana, and other series regulars were all replaced with new characters.  While still a great Mortal Kombat the omission of many of the series' regulars were too much for fans to take.

Mortal Kombat Trilogy for the Playstation boasted tons of playable characters

In order to solve these issues for the home console market, in 1996 Mortal Kombat Trilogy was developed for the PlayStation and the Nintendo 64.  On the surface they were very solid home console versions of the game, but the PlayStation version boasted 37 playable characters from each of the first three titles.  There were several improvements made to gameplay including the Brutality finishing maneuver, and the Aggressor bar which gave temporary boost in performance.  

The high number of playable characters really set the game apart from any game like it.  Having such a vast number of playable characters gave the game a high replay value.  Another feature that the game had was a cheat code for performing one button Fatalities.  This eliminated the need to perform the complicated inputs previously needed to perform these abilities.  

Tons of characters made for Mortal Kombat heaven

While the PlayStation version was a moderate hit, the Nintendo 64 was a different story.  Limitations in the system caused the developers once again to have to scale back the game.  The N64 version only had 30 characters included, among other limitations.

Mortal Kombat Trilogy also marked the end of 2D gaming for the series (until 2011's Mortal Kombat for PS3 and XBox 360).  Mortal Kombat 4 evolved the series into a 3D fighter.  Beyond that there were several other different style games set in the Mortal Kombat universe that further went away from the originals.    

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Retro Review: Lemmings - Multi-platform - 1991


If I told you there was a video game based on an urban legend perpetuated by the mass murder of cute little arctic rodents by the Disney company in the 1950's would you think I was crazy.  However it is true.  The game is called Lemmings, and before getting into the game I should explain the backstory.

This is a real live non-suicidal lemming.  
     A lemming is a small rodent that lives in Arctic regions of the world.  A popular misconception arose about lemmings, that during migration they would commit mass suicide by jumping off the edge of a cliff into the sea.  In 1958 Disney released "White Wilderness" a nature documentary in which they showed lemmings plunging off of cliff sides to their eventual death.  Sadly this was only an attempt to romanticize these legends and led to many people believing that the lemming stories were true.  The footage of the lemming suicide was staged and the poor little creatures were either pushed or launched into achieve the footage that was in the  documentary.  Then the poor little bastards tried to swim away from the Disney masochists, not realizing that they weren't just in the lake.  I have included that footage below and you can see for yourself.


However the idea of little creatures walking blindly into impending doom did tum out to inspire a pretty good video game.  The original 1991 version was released for the Amiga due to the fact it had a mouse which really is the logical way to play the game.  However the game was so much fun, there has been a version released for damn near every game system I've ever owned.  There is a version for the following systems: Amiga, Atari ST, PC, Mac, NES, SNES, Turbo Grafx CD, Sega Master System, Atari Lynx, Sega Genesis, Commodore 64, Sega Game Gear, Game Boy, PSP, PS1, PS2, 3DO, CD-i, and a bunch more for some obscure old systems.

Several of our brave lemming friends must explode to allow the herd to make  it to safety in this level.

Lemmings worked on a simple platformer basis.  The lemmings would pop out of a trap door into some type of peril.  Left to their own devices the lemmings will just walk until they hit something and turn around and walk the other way, even if that path will lead to their doom.  There was a goal at the end of the level and your job was to teach several lemmings a particular skill to help pave the way for the others to reach the goal safely.

The entire name of the game is strategy and using the jobs that are given correctly.  Climbers obviously climb things.  Floaters deploy an umbrella to avoid death from falling from a distance.  Bombers blow up and destroy everything within a certain radius.  Blockers stay put and keep other lemmings from passing.  Builders build 12 stairs.  And Bashers, Miners, and Diggers all just dig in different directions.

The original version came with its own side effect warning label.
The developers were very keen on keeping the learning curve manageable.  The first few levels are designed to familiarize yourself with the games controls and jobs.  As the game goes on the challenges get more and more severe.  Each level has its own specific goals, many of the levels will only require the saving of a percentage of the lovable little scamps.  Unfortunately these levels require you to use either blockers or bombers in your strategy to martyr themselves for the greater good.  And if you see that you need to save 100% of the lemmings you know that you have failed immediately after one dies.

The nuke button made Lemmings the best game to screw up ever.

And what did the developers do in those tricky situations where we were completely stuck with no hope of success?  Well they gave us the nuke button of course (Thank god Disney hasn't featured lemmings in any more recent nature films).  Instead of allowing the level to just end with some downer jingle and sad times that you screwed up, you got to blow all of your little friends to smithereens, just like this guy who sings his rather joyous lemmings song the whole time (They start exploding at about 1:20 if you want to spare yourself from hearing the song the whole time)...

  
Thankfully the real soundtrack for Lemmings doesn't quite pack the same punch.  It's hard to believe that Lemmings has now been around for over two decades.  And obviously it still has demand, I believe it is currently on sale for digital download on the PSN and will be coming up on its 25th anniversary within the next few years so I expect to see the title make a return in the future.  In my opinion it is still one of the all time greats as far as strategy games goes.  So unless the Sega Dreamcast is your last working game system, find a copy of Lemmings and have some fun.

Also thankfully YouTubers like to upload themselves playing games without singing along.  Here is some Lemmings gameplay to enjoy.  The second one is particularly amazing check them out.