G-Darius
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
G-Darius | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Taito |
Publisher(s) | Taito (arcade, PlayStation 2) CyberFront Corporation (Win) |
Platform(s) | Arcade Game, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, Windows 95 |
Release date | 1997 (arcade) 1998-04-09 (PS) |
Genre(s) | Shoot'em up |
Mode(s) | Single Player |
Rating(s) | E |
Media | CD |
Input methods | Gamepad, Keyboard |
Arcade system | Taito FX-1B [1] |
CPU | MIPS R3000A |
Sound | Panasonic MN1020012A |
G-Darius (Gダライアス) is a horizontally-scrolling shoot 'em up arcade game, released by Taito in 1997. It is part of the Darius series. The G stands for both Gigantic and Genesis (it is a prequel to the other Darius games).
Contents |
[edit] Story
G-Darius revolves around a conflict between the humanoids of Amnelia and cyborg/chimera biovessels known as the "Thiima" (meant to mean simply "bringers of death"). The Thiima had been aroused by the Amnelian army's use of the weapon A.N. (All-Nothing) to annihilate the world Blazar, whom Amnelia had been at war with over jurisdiction over the moon Mahsah. Determined to protect their existence, and long ago programmed to protect the universe from just such threats as A.N., the Thiima swarmed on Amnelia. Although the armed forces were badly ravaged, Amnelian scientists and engineers were able to make use of both A.N. and reverse engineered Thiiman technology/life systems to create the Silver Hawk fighters. Ultimately, two pilots--Sameluck Raida and Lutia Feen--are chosen to perform a decisive attack on the main Thiima base...Kazumn, a satellite of the planet Darius.
[edit] Description
G-Darius is the only game in the series to use real polygonal 3D graphics, and the last 'new' game of the series.
The gameplay is similar to that of its predecessors, with one main new feature. The Silver Hawk is equipped with Capture balls, which, when launched at an enemy, can capture it and allow the player to control it. Different enemies have different movements and firing patterns when captured. Gold enemies, having this color because of Solidnite shielding, cannot be captured. Captains (i.e. mid-boss vessels) are also armored with Solidnite, but lose this armor after sustaining a certain amount of damage, at which point they can be captured.
The player can detonate a captured enemy to create a powerful explosion that destroys both enemies and bullets (called capture bomb), or can absorb it and generate a destructive beam called the Alpha Beam.
During boss encounters, the boss can generate a Beta Beam, which can be counterattacked with the player's Alpha Beam. If both beams collide, the player must press a button repeatedly to push back and dispel the Beta Beam and hit the boss, or the Beta Beam will dispel the Alpha Beam and hit the player's ship. If the player successfully overtakes the Beta Beam, his Alpha Beam will double in size. Depending on how many Beta Beams the boss is using at a time or successively, this can be repeated until it covers the entire height of the screen.
When Silver Hawk is destroyed, the regenerated player retains upgraded major equipment levels, but equipment sublevels are reset to 1.
While the levels are arranged in the same branching structure as every other Darius game, G-Darius also has branching points within the levels themselves. In exchange, the stage tree only reaches five steps, as opposed to seven.
[edit] Stages and Bosses
Unlike past Darius games, a stage is divided into zone and area. A zone is sorted in Greek alphabet, while area is sorted in English alphabet. Zone names are started with letter G.
LEVEL 1: PLANET AMNELIA
Zone Alpha: Green Globe. Takes place around one of the coastal cities. A continues the fight in the city, while B takes the players into an underwater area. Boss: Eclipse Eye (gibberfish)
LEVEL 2: MOON MAHSAH
Zone Beta: Giant Plant. A forest filled with gigantic plants, gigantic pterosaurs, and even larger-than-normal Thiima. C stays to the forest, while D has the players fighting foes anchored to a dormant pterosaur. Boss: Tripod Sardine (tripod fish)
Zone Gamma: Gigantic Ship. Starts out over an oceanic city, but soon shifts to a long fight with the giantic boss Queen Fossil (coelecanth). E and F are different approaches to attacking Queen Fossil's auxiliary weapons--E is against its dorsal surface, F against its ventral.
LEVEL 3: OSU-RAKIA PASSAGE
Zone Delta: Granulated Star (i.e. shattered planets). In an unknown star system, the Thiima are not just attacking Sameluck and Lutia but, for some reason, turning planets into clouds of meteorites. G takes the players into one of the squid-like vessels attacking the planets, H along its surface. Boss: Dual Horn (spiny lobster)
Zone Epsilon: Galaxy Islands. An area of space containing bizarre structures like fungal trees. I has the same form as Delta's H, J is a generic open space area with a ringed gas giant. Boss: Dimension Diver (chimaera)
Zone Zeta: Gravity Zero. Starts out in a shattered space colony whose buildings are detaching and drifting away. K has the same form as Epsilon's J, L as Delta's G. Boss: Absolute Defender (pinecone fish)
LEVEL 4: PLANET MABAHER
Zone Eta: Glowing Cave. A large, lava-filled cavern. As with Gamma, the boss confrontation with Fire Fossil (another coelecanth) begins before the area split, with the same ways of approaching it.
Zone Theta: Gallery. A plain filled with Mesoamerican-style temples. O takes the players inside one of the temples, while P takes them to a snowy pine forest. Boss: Death Wings (manta ray)
Zone Iota: Glacier. An icy sea in Mabaher's Arctic area. Q takes the fight up and around a mountain of ice, R into the waters below the ice cap. Boss: Eight-Foot Umbrella (cirrate octopus)
Zone Kappa: Garden of Sky. Up in the clouds, Sameluck and Lutia must confront the Thiima in free-floating islets with small forests. S is a non-snowy version of Theta's P, while T is similar to Beta's C, albeit with giant wasps rather than giant pterosaurs. Boss: Eternal Triangle (goblin shark)
LEVEL 5: DARIUS STAR SYSTEM
Zone Lambda: Grand Cliff. A set of grassy cliffs on Darius leading to an ancient Thiima base. Interestingly, Titanic Lance from Darius Gaiden is shown partially buried in one cliff. U leads to a set of launching bays, V to rock-hewn tunnels under the main base. Boss: Lightning Coronatus (crowned seahorse)
Zone Mu: Great Fortress. The northern hemisphere of the satellite Kazumn. W and X lead to different parts of the base. Boss: Heavy Arms Shell (leatherback turtle)
Zone Nu: Genesis. A bizarre extra-dimensional space that seems to even be outside the usual laws of time. It is from here that the Thiima are actually spawned. Y and Z seem to lead to distinct portions of the space; Z has a double helix/DNA motif. Boss: The Embryon (sea angel), which is supposed to be the Thiima's leader, or at least the best analogue available to them for a leader.
Zone Xi: Great Fortress II. Very similar to Mu, just the southern hemisphere. Boss: Accordion Hazard (anomalocaris)
Zone Omicron: Grave of Culture. The stage begins in the midst of a fierce thunderstorm, amidst the ruins of an abandoned Darius city, with the boss chasing the players. U' and V' are similar to Lambda's respective zones, albeit underwater. Boss: G.T./Great Thing (sperm whale)
[edit] Ver.2
A version 2 of the game was released in arcade, with following changes:
- Increased difficulty.
- Default play cost is increased 2 coins per credit from 1 coin per credit.
- Added beginner mode. In beginner mode, game ended after completing only 3 zones.
- Standard auto-fire.
- When using capture bomb, player is no longer invulnerable.
- With silver barrier, player is vulnerable to obstacles. With gold barrier, it can take 1 hit.
- All stages include mid bosses.
- Boss battle includes timer (180 sec for normal bosses, 420 sec for final boss). 10000 bonus points are added for each remaining second after destroying boss.
- High score database records high scores for each zone.
[edit] Ports
G-Darius was ported to the PlayStation, and is included in the compilations Taito Memories Gekan and Taito Legends 2, both for the PlayStation 2. Playstation 2 port only includes the arcade mode from the Playstation game. Playstation version added BOSS VS mode, Beginner mode, and auto-fire button.
The Windows 95 version, based on the Playstation game, has been published by CyberFront Corporation, MediaKite, and Sourcenext.
[edit] Trivia
- G-Darius is the only game of the series that does not use the same pilots from the previous games (Proco & Tiat) and the relationship between the new pilots in G-Darius is given more emphasis than its predecessors. One of the motifs of G-Darius is supposed to be the "exodus of Adam and Eve".
- The Alpha/Beta beam duel addition is not a new motif to Taito; 'beam duelling' between player and enemy first appeared in Taito's experimental shooter Metal Black.
- The Capture Ball system is rooted in the mid-boss capture system in Darius Gaiden. There, the Captain vessels had Capture Ball-like objects embedded in them. By focusing one's fire on the ball, a player could, instead of just destroying the Captain, dislodge the ball. After doing so, catching it would cause the Captain to fight alongside the player for a time before exploding. In G-Darius, most captured enemies sport a Capture Ball in the same way the Gaiden Captains did.
- Some of the game's developers later left Taito and started a new company, G.rev.[2] Their game Border Down is very similar to G-Darius, as well as to Metal Black.
- The Omicron ending is meant to portray the Belser finding and appropriating the wreckage of the destroyed Thiima around Darius and Kazumn for themselves.
- The game's title is an intentional anagram of Gradius, which has been one of the most influential horizontal scrolling shoot 'em ups.
[edit] External links
- G-Darius+Raystorm PACK page
- G-Darius G-Darius at MobyGames
- G-Darius at The Killer List of Videogames
|