Solar Striker

Solar Striker

Cover art
Developer(s) Minakuchi Engineering
Nintendo R&D1
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Designer(s) Gunpei Yokoi (producer)[1]
Satoru Okada, Keisuke Terasaki (directors)[1]
K. Sugimoto (main program)[1]
K. Hayashi, A. Higashiya, K. Katsuyama, K. Yamagami (graphic designers)[1]
Platform(s) Game Boy
Release date(s)
  • JP January 26, 1990
  • NA February 1990
  • EU September 28, 1990
Genre(s) Shoot 'em up
Mode(s) Single-player
Media/distribution Cartridge

Solar Striker (ソーラーストライカー?) is a vertical scrolling shooter video game for the Nintendo Game Boy. This is the only scrolling shoot 'em up published by Nintendo.

Contents

Description

Plot

"The year is 2159. The Earth Federal Government was established, linking the people with a common government against other species. As part of this new addition and to defend the human race's peace and safety, the Earth Federal Army was also created."

"The army went on the offensive, and attacked a star known as 'Turin.' However, the Earth Federal Army was no match for the overwhelming combat power of Turin, and Earth's fate seemed sealed. As Earth's last chance, a top-secret mobile unit developed a very advanced space fighter in Earth's last fortification. Flying with the mothership, 'Mother Atena', it arrived at Turin's solar system as the last chance for a violent and final attack on the Turin forces. This advanced spacecraft, and Earth's last hope for survival, is code-named 'Solar Striker'."[2]

Gameplay

You control the advanced space fighter, code-named: Solar Striker. There are six levels of play against the forces of Reticulon. Enemies appear from the top of the screen. Special ships can be shot and power-ups can be obtained. One power-up means twice the shooting. Three power-ups mean thrice the shooting. Five power-ups means big blasts on enemies which are helpful, especially against tough enemies and bosses that take many hits to destroy. There are a variety of enemies as well as sub-bosses in the later levels. They descend in patterns and bosses have their own way to try to defeat the player.

When you complete all six levels for the first time and after the credits roll, you'll be able to play Hard Mode by pressing Select instead of Start when you return to the title screen.

Reception

Mean Machines described Solar Striker as "adequate", but noted a there was a lack of material to keep players interested, giving the game a score of 69%.[3] Allgame rated it 2.5/5, describing it as a "decent shooter but nothing great", and citing its difficulty as a deterrent to enjoying it.[4] German magazine Power Play praised the title for its variety in terms of enemies and levels, though noted the underlying simplicity of the game as well, giving it a score of 70%.[5] Author Jeff Rovin in the book How to Win at Game Boy Games described the title as "one of the oldest kinds of Nintendo games", comparing it to SNK's Alpha Mission but added there were too few instances of innovation or surprises, and the powerups were "unsatisfying".[6]

Appearances in other media

References

External links