Shadowrun (SNES)

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Shadowrun
Shadowrun
Developer(s) Beam Software
Publisher(s) Data East
Platform(s) Super NES
Release date NA 01 November 1993
JPN 25 March 1994
EU 28 July 1994
Genre(s) Action role-playing game
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) None
Media 8-megabit cartridge
Input methods Joypad

Shadowrun is a cyberpunk action RPG for the Super NES adapted from the pen and paper RPG Shadowrun by FASA. The game was developed by Australian company Beam Software (now Krome Studios Melbourne) and released on November 1, 1993 by Data East.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The player takes on the role of Jake Armitage (an homage to one of the main characters in William Gibson's novel Neuromancer), a courier who is shot and nearly killed in the streets of Seattle in the year 2050 by a hit squad. He wakes up in a morgue with amnesia. The remainder of the game follows Jake as he attempts to uncover his own identity, as well as that of the mysterious figure who wants him dead.

[edit] Gameplay

As an action RPG video game, Shadowrun combines both the statistical factor in the tabletop game with real-time gameplay. For example, the player controls Jake, moves him around using the controller, and when attacked, must use guns or magic commands to respond. Some battles within the game require sharp reflexes. This is further complicated by the fact that the Seattle in the game is a tough city - practically every screen contains at least one hidden assassin who, from random locations, opens fire on Jake; the player must immediately find the source of the attack and respond or risk death. At the same time, Jake builds up "karma" from killing enemies. Karma can then be allocated by the player into different attributes, skills, and magical powers.

As the title of the game implies, Jake is described as a "shadowrunner," a mercenary character common within the Shadowrun RPG. Moreover, in the game, Jake is able to hire other shadowrunners as henchmen, though it is possible for the player to win the game without hiring a single shadowrunner.

In interacting with non-player characters, Shadowrun uses an unusual system. Whenever Jake hears a new and unusual term, this word is highlighted, then added to a sort of database of terms he can use. From that point on, when speaking with NPCs, Jake is able to ask them about this new word; only in this manner can a player progress with the game.

The game also includes an unusual way of entering into cyberspace. Using a cyberdeck, Jake is able to hack into computers to retrieve information, as well as gain more money, which in the game is nuyen (noo-yen). During such scenes, the gameplay becomes two-dimensional while an icon of Jake moves through cyberspace, fights intrusion programs, and retrieves data. As in the original RPG (and cyberpunk literature in general), if the player dies in cyberspace, he dies in real life as well.

[edit] Storyline

The story opens in Seattle, Washington, where Jake Armitage is shown being murdered at the hands of armed gunmen. A ghostly dog appears once the killers have gone and walks over to the body. Later, Jake reawakens on a slab in the city morgue. He must now get his bearings and find out who put him there. Upon leaving the morgue, a punk who witnessed Jake's shooting recognizes him and flees, believing that the assassins will now kill him too. In his panic, the punk runs into an alley and is shot by hired hitmen who have come to finish Jake off. Upon slaying the hitmen, Jake is approached again by the "Dog Spirit", a shamanistic totem who gives him a warning before vanishing into the shadows.

The rest of the story is spent investigating the events leading to Jake's shooting, as well the person who ordered his assassination, a mysterious crimelord named "Drake". It is revealed that Jake is a courier who was carrying a program in his "head computer", a computer built inside his brain. The program was designed to destroy a malevolent artificial intelligence, which the sinister Anekei corporation is trying to protect. The company is being aided by Drake, who is in reality a dragon and is behind the entire plot.

The storyline is loosely based on the first Shadowrun novel, Never Deal with a Dragon, by Robert N. Charrette.

[edit] Music

Music was composed by Marshall Parker.[1]

[edit] Differences between versions

An unreleased ROM file of the game contains a much more crude script than the release version of Shadowrun. For example, one line is changed from "morgue guys" to "chop shop guys." [2]

The Japanese version of Shadowrun has a significantly longer introduction than the English version of the game.

[edit] References

  1. ^ MobyGames.
  2. ^ Nightmare and Kurt Kalata. Hardcore Gaming 101: Shadowrun. GameSpy. Retrieved on 2008-05-27.

[edit] External links