Sailor Moon video games

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The Sailor Moon video games, both console and arcade, were released in Japan during the height of the media franchise's popularity. They have never been released in any other country, with the single exception of the Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon game developed by Angel, which was released in France in 1996. [citation needed]The games are hard to find in any other country unless downloaded from the internet as ROMs.

Bandai produced a small number of Sailor Moon games, but the majority were handled by a Japanese game company called Angel. Early games were side-scrolling fighters, whereas later games were unique puzzle games, and even later titles chose to go a versus fighting game style. Another Story was the only game to stand out, being a role-playing game. Panic in Nakayoshi World was also released, an overhead Adventures of Lolo-style puzzle game featuring characters from various Nakayoshi-printed manga. Sailor Moon and Chibi Moon are playable characters.

The games mainly saw release on the Super Famicom, with the first side-scroller being ported to the Sega Mega Drive. A separate arcade side-scrolling fighter was also released.

In addition, two side-scrolling adventure games were produced for the Game Boy (Sailormoon and Sailormoon R), and a side-scrolling game was also produced for the Game Gear (Sailormoon S).

The first versus fighting game from the series was released for the 3DO. However, as the 3DO did not sell well outside of Japan, this game has gone largely unnoticed. Produced by Bandai themselves as opposed to Angel for the other two, this game is considerably different. A final versus fighting game was released for the Sega Saturn and Sony PlayStation.

A game was released in the US for the PC. It was a minigame compilation titled The 3D Adventures of Sailor Moon. Aside from the theme, the games did nothing to tie in to the series.

Contents

[edit] Sailor Moon (Angel) 1993

Sailor Moon
Developer(s) Angel
Series Sailor Moon Games
Release date(s) 1993
Genre(s) beat 'em up
Mode(s) 1 Player or 2 Player
Platform(s) Arcade, SNES, Super Famicom
Media SNES/Super Famicom Cart
Input 1 or 2 SNES/Super Famicom Controlers

Sailor Moon (美少女戦士セーラームーン, Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon) is a beat 'em up arcade game developed by Angel in 1993, and adapted to the SNES. It was translated into French in 1996.

The game is set in the first series of Sailor Moon, and you control one or two of the five heroines (Inner Senshi). Each senshi has some sequences of blows , and has their own 'special move' that can attack all enemies at once.

The game is divided into five stages:

  • Latin Quarter (boss: Bakene)
  • Amusement Park (boss: Murido)
  • Secret Machine (boss: Zoisite disguised as Sailor Moon)
  • Silver Millennium (boss: Kunzite)
  • Dark Kingdom (boss: Prince Endymion and Queen Beryl)

The five heroines are:

  • Sailor Moon alias Usagi Tsukino; her special attack is Moon Tiara Action
  • Sailor Mercury alias Ami Mizuno; her special attack is Shabon Spray. She is faster than the other Senshi but has a shorter attack.
  • Sailor Mars alias Rei Hino; her default attack is the kick, which is stronger than her punch. Her special attack is Fire Soul.
  • Sailor Jupiter alias Makoto Kino; her special attack is Supreme Thunder.
  • Sailor Venus alias Minako Aino; the only Sailor Senshi who uses a weapon in her special attack - her special attack is Venus Love-me Chain.

The enemies are mostly the youma of the Dark Kingdom that appeared during the anime, but if more than one of the same kind appears at once, the others are coloured differently (a common device for this genre of games):

  • Akan
  • Crane Arashino Joe
  • Garoben
  • Twin
  • Jiji
  • Chiffon Puppet (unique to the game)
  • Clown (unique to the game)
  • Female magician (unique to the game)

This game was translated into French in Europe, but was never imported to the United States. In the French translation, there were many errors:

  • If you lose the game, "SIN" is displayed onscreen, rather than "FIN" ("game over").
  • After each level, Tuxedo Mask appears to grade each Senshi's performance. He says "MOYENE" (a non-existant word) rather than "MOYEN" ("Average").
  • Sailor Venus was renamed Sailor Mathilde.
  • The final scene's dialogue has many incomplete sentences.

[edit] Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon (Gazelle/Banpresto) 1995

Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon
Developer(s) Gazelle, Banpresto
Series Sailor Moon Games
Release date(s) March 1995
Genre(s) Beat 'em up
Mode(s) 1 Player or 2 Players
Platform(s) Arcade game

Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon is a beat 'em up arcade developed by Gazelle and edited by Banpresto, released in March, 1995.

You control one of the Inner Senshi. Each of them has some sequences of blows and has their own special attack that does damage to all on-screen enemies at once.

[edit] Personel

  • Supervisors : Naoko Takeuchi, Fumio Osano
  • Executive Producer : Kisaburoh Higashi
  • Producer : Johan Satoh
  • Coordinator : Toshifumi Kawashima
  • Director : Hiroyuki Fujimoto
  • Artistic Director : Satoshi Iwataki
  • Assistant Artistic Director : Toshinobu Komazawa
  • Graphics : Junya Inoue, Mihoko Sudoh, Otokazu Eda, Yuhko Tataka, Shingo Ishikawa, Mikio Yamaguchi, Kumi Kayama, Noboru Inamoto Masayuki Ohsumi, Tohru Iwataki
  • Animation Supervisor : Kensei Sasaki
  • Animation Director : Kazuko Tadano
  • Animators : Hiromi Matsushita, Studio Live
  • Digitising animations : Miki Higuchi, Mutsuo Danki, Hiroko Koyano, Mayumi Onodera
  • Music : Seiichi Sakurai
  • Sound Effects : Yoshitatsu Sakai
  • Hardware Supervisor : Hideki Ikinaga
  • Hardware Coordinator : Kazuhisa Takasu
  • Hardware Conception : Hiroyuki Nagayoshi
  • Programming : Hiroyuki Fujimoto
  • Voices :
    • Kotono Mitsuishi : Sailor Moon
    • Aya Hisakawa : Sailor Mercury
    • Michie Tomizawa : Sailor Mars
    • Emi Shinohara : Sailor Jupiter
    • Rika Fukami : Sailor Venus

[edit] Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon: Another Story (Angel) 1995

Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon: Another Story

The title screen of Another Story
Developer(s) Angel
Series Sailor Moon Games
Release date(s) 22 September, 1995 [1]
Genre(s) RPG
Mode(s) 1 Player
Platform(s) Super Famicom
Media 1 Super Famicom Cart
Input Super Famicom Controler

Another Story is unique among the Sailor Moon games as it is an RPG. In battle, compatible Sailor Senshi (2 or 3) can use "Link Techniques". [2] EP (energy points) regenerate after each battle [3], unlike the MP of Final Fantasy. The storyline of the RPG is fairly linear. All ten members of the Sailor Team are playable, although Sailor Pluto and Sailor Saturn are only playable in battle. [4]

The game appears to be set between the third and fourth story arcs, though some elements appear to come from later (including specific powers possessed by the characters). The story has elements of both anime and manga, as well as some unique twists. Throughout the game, the player can also collect puzzle pieces which make an image of the Senshi and Tuxedo Mask. If the puzzle is completed, there is a reward at the end.

In Another Story, an evil woman named Apsu arrives from the 30th century. She has gathered a group of girls and ordered them affect the past in order to change the future to her liking, with the ultimate goal of attaining the Mystical Silver Crystal. Her followers are called the "Oppositio Senshi," and succeed in changing the fates of the defeated villains from the first three story arcs.

With the advice of the ghosts of the Shitennou, the Senshi set out to regain the Barashizou, Tuxedo Mask's stone (which replaces the Golden Crystal in the game) in order to change Sailor Moon's destiny back, and to save Crystal Tokyo (the utopic city of the future). The game has two endings. If the player loses to the final boss, Chibiusa and the remaining Senshi will fight a slightly easier form of it and the player will receive the "bad" ending.

[edit] Characters unique to the game

  • Apsu: The woman controlling the villains.
  • Sin: The Oppositio version of Sailor Moon.
  • Anshar: Sin's younger brother, who becomes a friend to Chibiusa.
  • Nabu: The Oppositio version of Sailor Mercury.
  • Ishtar: The Oppositio version of Sailor Venus.
  • Marduk: The Oppositio version of Sailor Jupiter.
  • Nergal: The Oppositio version of Sailor Mars.

[edit] Changes made for the game

  • Pluto's Garnet Rod is green instead of its normal purple.
  • In the unofficial English translation, the Holy Grail is called the Moon Cup.
  • The Grail is present even when the eight senshi needed are not present (Manga) despite being broken (Anime)
  • The Barashizou (Rose Crystal) replaces the Golden Crystal.
  • Sailor Pluto can stop time with out falling into a dimensional rift.


Sailor Moon series
v  d  e
Codename: Sailor V | Manga | Anime | Episode list | English adaptations | Musicals | Video games | Live action
Actors | Story locations | Sailor Moon R movie | Sailor Moon S movie | Sailor Moon SuperS movie | Parallel Sailor Moon
Protagonists (including Sailor Senshi)
Usagi Tsukino | Chibiusa | Mamoru Chiba
Ami Mizuno | Rei Hino | Makoto Kino | Minako Aino
Setsuna Meioh | Michiru Kaioh | Haruka Tenoh | Hotaru Tomoe
Luna | Artemis | Diana | ChibiChibi | Sailor Starlights
Princess Kakyuu | Queen Serenity | Sailor Cosmos

Supporting cast
Tsukino Family | Other humans | Other
Antagonists

Dark Kingdom | (Shitennou/Generals)
Makaiju Aliens
Black Moon Clan | (Ayakashi Sisters)
Death Busters | (Witches 5)
Dead Moon Circus | (Amazon Trio | Amazoness Quartet)
Shadow Galactica | (Sailor Galaxia | Sailor Animamates)

Chaos

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