Fighting Mania

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Fighting Mania arcade cabinet (Korean version).
Fighting Mania arcade cabinet (Korean version).

Fighting Mania, released in Japan as Punch Mania: Hokuto no Ken (パンチマニア 北斗の拳 Panchi Mania Hokuto no Ken?), is a 2000 arcade boxing game based on the manga and anime series Fist of the North Star.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The arcade cabinet stands about 6'2" tall, 34" wide (when facing the machine), and about 4' deep. The monitor is recessed into the cabinet a fair distance, and in the front of the cabinet are six orange, sturdy punching pads with red LED lights embedded near their hinges. The pads are at rest along the inside walls of the recession of the cabinet, lining the monitor. There are also two black plastic "special gloves" that rest in pockets on the front of the machine, which are normally tied with rope or chain to the arcade cabinet to prevent theft. The player is to wear these gloves while playing (although it is also common practice to play without the gloves, though this can scrape the knuckles).

When an on-screen enemy makes an attack on the player, a punch pad will swing out on its hinge at a smooth pace, and upon reaching full extension at 90 degrees, the LEDs light up red. The pad stays lit for a short time, and then the pad returns inside the cabinet to rest. The player must punch this pad while the LEDs are lit. The strength of the player's punch is irrelevant to the game, and the game warns the player not to punch hard, to prevent the risk of breaking the machine. Only the timing of the punch is important, punches should be delivered at half strength, with exact timing.

Punching a pad when it is fully extended and the LEDs lit results in the attack being blocked, and the opponent receiving damage in the form of a counter-attack. Punching too early or too late results in either blocking the move with no counter-attack, or receiving lessened damage from the attack, also with no counter-attack damage to the opponent. Missing a pad completely (the pad retracting without ever being hit) results in full damage taken by the player. As opponents get more difficult - and particularly when they use their special moves - punches will be thrown and pads will pop out in faster succession and in more chaotic patterns, or special precautions may need to be taken, such as only striking one pad that is lit while other dummy pads pop up, or striking pads in the exact order they deploy.

Like conventional fighting games, the player has a life gauge at the top, and the enemy has a life gauge that must be brought to zero as well. Also both characters have a tech meter, in the form of seven stars remotely resembling the Big Dipper'. As attacks are landed or damage is taken, the stars light up along the super gauge and when full, the game will automatically execute the special move for the player. The game will also instruct the player how to use the particular special move it chose, based on the enemy the player is fighting. The game follows the Fist of the North Star series, as each enemy is not only a character from the series, but the finishing moves the player must use to defeat them are taken from the series as well. The game grades the player's performance based on their remaining life, agility, technique (wiz), skills and the use of finishing moves (arts).

[edit] Courses and characters

At the start of the game, the player must choose their course. Each course consist of a set of opponents within a certain story arc. This serves as a difficulty setting. The first course is a tutorial where Kenshiro's master, Ryuken, will teach the player how to play the game and explain the finer points of timing punches. The subsequent courses involve progessively harder opponents moving toward the right, and include story arcs from the series as Kenshiro's quest to fight Shin and avenge himself and Julia, or Rei's quest to fight Yuda after the Harbinger of Death has befallen him, leaving him with only 3 days to live.

  • Playable characters are:
    • Kenshiro - The main character from Fist of the North Star. He is the character for all paths, except Course 5 and 7.
    • Rei - Kenshiro's ally in the series, and the hero for the fifth course. In Rei's quest, the first opponent is Raoh, who ends the battle with a fatal blow. At this point, "the Death Omen Star has fallen over Rei." Whatever life is left in the gauge after this battle will be what he will start with against the next opponent, and so on through the path without regaining life after each battle.
    • Raoh - In the seventh and final course, the player plays as Raoh, the leading antagonist in Fist of the North Star, and Kenshiro's brother. The path follows Raoh's rise to power to become the "King of Fists."

The following are the game's six paths and the opponent faced in each level.

  • "Basics of Hokuto Shinken" (tutorial):
    • Ryuken (tutorial)
    • Zeed
  • "Southern Cross"
    • Zeed
    • Heart
    • Shin
  • "Nanto Roku Seiken"
    • The King of Kiba
    • Rei
    • Shuh (the Star of Benevolence)
    • Souther
  • "End of Century's Conqueror Ken-Oh"
    • Colonel
    • Devil
    • The Warden Uighur
    • Ken-Oh
  • "Nanto Roku Seiken, Star of Justice" (play as Rei)
    • Ken-Oh
    • The King of Kiba
    • Amiba
    • Yuda (the Star of Enchantment)
  • "Legend of the Century End's Savior"
    • Jagi
    • Amiba
    • Toki
    • Ryuga
    • Raoh
  • "Legend of the Century's End Conqueror" (play as Raoh)
    • Toki
    • Jyuza of the Clouds
    • Fudoh of the Mountains
    • Kenshiro

[edit] Sequel

The game was followed by a Japan-only sequel/upgrade titled Punch Mania Hokuto no Ken 2: Gekitō Shura no Kuni Hen (パンチマニア 北斗の拳2 激闘 修羅の国編 Panchi Mania Hokuto no Ken Tsū: Gekitō Shura no Kuni Hen?, "Clash at the Land of Asura"). In addition to containing all seven paths from the original game, the sequel adds five additional paths based on the Hokuto no Ken 2 anime series (the latter half of the manga). In addition, the game was distributed in a deluxe two monitor cabinet that allowed two-players to play simultaneously in competitive matches against each other or cooperative against a pair of CPU-controlled opponents.

[edit] External links