Sonic Battle

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For the GameCube game, see Sonic Adventure 2 Battle.
Sonic Battle
Image:Sonic Battle Coverart.png
Developer(s) Dimps
Sonic Team (supervising)
Publisher(s) THQ
Sega (JPN)
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance
Release date JPN December 4, 2003
NA January 5, 2004
PAL February 27, 2004 [1]
Genre(s) Fighting, Adventure
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Rating(s) ESRB: Everyone (E)
PEGI: 7+
Media 128-Megabit cartridge

Sonic Battle is a fighting game in the Sonic the Hedgehog series, developed by Dimps and published either by Sega (in Japan) or THQ (outside of Japan)[2] for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance. This is the second Sonic fighting game, the first being the 3D arcade game Sonic the Fighters.

Contents

[edit] Storyline

About 4000 years ago, a sentient weapon called the Gizoid was created by an ancient civilization. After being lost for millennia, the Gizoid was unearthed and researched by Prof. Gerald Robotnik. It remained dormant for another half century before being discovered by, of all people, resident would-be ruler of the world and Gerald's grandson, Dr. Eggman. Frustrated at his inability to get the dormant Gizoid to work properly, Eggman dumped the contraption at Emerald Beach... where it was discovered once again, this time by legendary hero Sonic the Hedgehog. The Gizoid, which Sonic names Emerl, gets wrapped up in the affairs of Sonic's friends, allies and rivals. Through his encounters with Sonic, Tails, Knuckles, Amy, Cream, Rouge, and Shadow, Emerl grows and evolves from a soulless robot into a fun-loving mech with lots of personality. But while the gang is having fun raising their new mechanical friend, there are those who recognize Emerl's true power. Now that the Gizoid is working again, Eggman's got his eye on it, Rouge wants to turn it into a master thief, and Shadow senses that, despite their efforts to humanize him, Emerl is still designed and programmed to be a weapon of mass destruction (and he also believes the same for himself). This is proven in the last fight, where Emerl fights Eggman and reveals his dark side. He is about to destroy the world when Sonic comes and destroys it. Emerl tells everyone that he was thankful for meeting them, and how such good friends they were. Emerl mechanically combusts, and leaves an Emerald Shard behind as his remains.

[edit] Gameplay

The following characters are playable:

Battles are fought in 3D arenas with up to 4 players. Each character has a set of attacks and abilities. The majority of attacks are used with B, including the combo (1st, 2nd, and 3rd Attack), Air Attack, Upper Attack (used to knock opponents straight up), Heavy Attack (used to knock opponents away), and Aim Attack (used to pursue an opponent after the Heavy Attack). The A button is used to jump, and the L button lets the player block attacks, or heal damage if the button is held. The playable characters also have unique special moves, the three types being Shot, Power, and Set. Shot moves center around using a projectile to damage the opponent from a distance. Power moves focus on dealing damage quickly in a single move. Trap moves generally involve using a type of bomb to surprise-attack the enemy. However, only a limited number of special moves can be selected. Shot, Power, and Trap must be allocated to three slots: Ground, Air, and Defend. The special move you set to Ground will be used when you press R on the ground. The move you set to Air will be used when you press R in mid-air. The last slot, Defend, has a different function; When you set a certain type of special move to Defend, then every time an enemy uses the same type of special to attack you, you'll automatically block it.[3]

Each player has two vital stats, a health bar and an Ichikoro Gauge. When health is completely depleted, the player is KO'd and loses one life (in a survival match) or the one who KO'd them gets a point (in a KO match). The Ground, Air, and Defend settings are chosen at the beginning of the match, and every time the player respawns. As a player takes damage, blocks attacks, or heals, the Ichikoro Gauge fills up. When it is full, the next special move the player does will instantly KO anyone it hits. However, if they chose to defend against that type of special, or successfully block, their Ichikoro Gauge will be filled instantly. Players healing damage will also slowly fill up their Ichikoro Gauge, but are still vulnerable to attacks.[4]

One tactic is to use a Trap special when the Ichikoro Gauge is full, so if the opponent didn't choose Trap as their Defense, they will instantly be KO'd upon touching the trap. This works best with characters whose traps conceal themselves (Knuckles) or move around (Tails, Rouge, and Shadow).

The main gimmick of the game is called the Skill Capture system. Emerl can imitate the actions and attacks of every other character. He starts out with slow, incomplete captures of Sonic's actions, which serve as the defaults. As the game is played, the abilities of other characters are recorded as Skill Cards. After each fight, certain skills are captured this way, one card per character per fight (so if Emerl fought Tails, he would get a Tails data card, and if he fought Sonic, he would get a Sonic data card.) The capturable actions consist of not only the attacks and special moves each character performs, but their individual abilities in running, jumping, mid-air actions, and the like. These can be allocated to their corresponding slots in Emerl's ability list, and doing so gives Emerl the new moves to use in battle. (Note: What the charaters do ingame does not determine what the Skill Card will be.) Sometimes you will get a rare skill such as one of the skills on the third page of Emerl's skill-edit list (ex: fight pose, color 1, attack support). However, all these abilities cannot be used simultaneously. A limit is placed on the amount of non-default Skill Cards that can be used, in the form of skill points. Each card has a certain number of stars shown on the corner, and for each star, five skill points must be available to use on it. The total number of required skill points of all the allocated Skill Cards cannot exceed the current maximum of skill points Emerl has accumulated. Like the Skill Cards themselves, the skill point maximum is increased slightly with each battle, to a maximum of 500.

Since Emerl is powered by the Chaos Emeralds, there are cutscenes in the Story Mode episodes in which the Emeralds are used to enhance Emerl's abilities. Each Emerald raises the skill point maximum by 10, a rather large amount considering that most of the time, individual battles raise it by 1-5 (depending on performance). The player can choose to replay a Story Mode episode after it's been completed, but the Skill Card/Point data is still saved. Oddly enough, the skill point maximum is raised at the Chaos Emerald cutscene every time the player reaches them. This means the same Story Mode episode can be repeated to raise Emerl's skill points faster than normal.

[edit] Locations

Each character has an arena they can be found fighting at, and several arenas can be found in a larger map screen of a location.

Emerald Town
  • Emerald Beach - Sonic
  • Tails' Lab - Tails
  • Beach - Tails' arena in Emerl's story, identical to Emerald Beach.
Holy Summit
  • Chao Ruins - Knuckles
  • The Crater - Chaos
Central City
  • Battle Highway - Shadow
  • Amy's Room - Amy
  • Library - Cream
Night Babylon
  • Club Rouge - Rouge
Gimme Shelter
  • Metal Depot - Gamma
Death Egg
  • Death Egg - Eggman
Other

[edit] Minigames

Sonic Battle has five minigames that can be played. The player starts off with one by default, then unlocks more as progress is made in the story mode.[6]

  • Soniclash - The only minigame available at the start. Players try to knock their opponents off the field to get points.
  • Tails' Fly and Get - Players fly around and try to collect more rings than their opponents.
  • Knuckles' Mine Hunt - Minesweeper, with a Sonic the Hedgehog twist, and the only single-player mini-game.
  • Amy's Treasure Island - Players move around and try to find emeralds.
  • Shadow's Speed Demon - A racing game to reach the goal first. This is based heavily off of Radical Highway from Sonic Adventure 2.

[edit] Reception


Game Rankings current score for Sonic Battle is 69.3%.

[edit] References