Sega Genesis Collection

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sega Genesis Collection

Original cover art
Developer(s) Digital Eclipse Software Inc.
Publisher(s) Sega
Platform(s) PlayStation 2
PlayStation Portable
Release date(s)
  • NA November 16, 2006
  • EU February 2, 2007
  • AUS February 8, 2007
Genre(s) Compilation (various)
Mode(s) Single-player
multiplayer

The Sega Genesis Collection , also known as the Sega Mega Drive Collection in PAL regions, is a video game compilation for the PlayStation 2 and PSP, compiled and emulated by Digital Eclipse and released in the U.S. in 2006 and Europe and Australia in 2007. The collection includes twenty-eight (twenty-seven in the PAL versions) Sega Genesis games from a variety of genres, as well as unlockable classic Sega arcade games, with different sets of arcade games for the PlayStation 2 and PSP versions.

List of Genesis Games

Titles included in the Sega Genesis Collection
# Title Release Notes
#01 Alex Kidd in the Enchanted Castle 1989
#02 Altered Beast 1989
#03 Bonanza Bros. 1990
#04 Columns 1990
#05 Comix Zone 1995
#06 Decap Attack 1991
#07 Ecco the Dolphin 1993
#08 Ecco: The Tides of Time 1994
#09 Ecco Jr. 1995
#10 Flicky 1991
#11 Gain Ground 1991
#12 Golden Axe 1989
#13 Golden Axe II 1991
#14 Golden Axe III 1993
#15 Kid Chameleon 1992
#16 Phantasy Star II 1989
#17 Phantasy Star III: Generations of Doom 1991
#18 Phantasy Star IV: The End of the Millennium 1994
#19 Ristar 1995
#20 Shadow Dancer: The Secret of Shinobi 1990 unavailable in the PAL release
#21 Shinobi III: Return of the Ninja Master 1993
#22 Sonic The Hedgehog 1991
#23 Sonic The Hedgehog 2 1992
#24 Super Thunder Blade 1988
#25 Sword of Vermilion 1990
#26 Vectorman 1995
#27 Vectorman 2 1996
#28 Virtua Fighter 2 1996 Mega Drive/Genesis version

Extras

This collection also features more than thirty-five minutes of unlockable interviews from SEGA of Japan, a "museum" with facts about the games, strategy tips and box art[1] for each game, as well as a "Sega Cheat Sheet" that consists of cheat codes for most games, and a set of unlockable arcade games, (some of which are from the early Sega/Gremlin era).

The PS2's unlockable arcade titles are:

Unlockable titles included in the PS2 version
# Title Release Notes
Altered Beast (Arcade version) 1988
Future Spy 1984
Tac/Scan 1982
Zaxxon 1982
Zektor 1982

The PSP's unlockable arcade titles are:

Unlockable titles included in the PSP version
# Title Release Notes
Astro Blaster 1981
Congo Bongo (AKA Tip Top) 1983
Eliminator 1981
Space Fury 1981
Super Zaxxon 1982

Reception

Sega Genesis Collection
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings81.12%[2]
Metacritic82 out of 100[3]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Eurogamer8/10[4]
Game Informer8.75/10
GameSpot8.1/10
GameSpy4/5
GameZone9/10
IGN8.6/10
X-Play4/5

The game won the award and Reader's Choice for Best Compilation Game on GameSpot's "Best and Worst" 2006.

Notes

The European version does not include Shadow Dancer. However, it does fix previous speed problems concerning Sonic the Hedgehog which plagued the game's original PAL Mega Drive incarnation and most home console emulations of the game.

This is the first time Golden Axe III has been released in Europe and Australia and the second in North America, as it was briefly available in the U.S. on Sega's Sega Channel.

This collection marks the first appearance of the two Vectorman games on the PS2 in North America, since Sonic Gems Collection has remained unreleased Stateside on the console, with the exception of the GameCube version.

According to ToeJam & Earl Productions, they were going to include ToeJam & Earl and its sequel, ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron as well, but Sega wasn't very fond of the series, so they included Sonic the Hedgehog and its first sequel, Sonic the Hedgehog 2 as well as Flicky, Ristar, and Comix Zone instead, to make up for the emulation issues of the PlayStation 2 version of Sonic Mega Collection Plus. The reason is listed on the bottom of this section.

It is of note that the Streets of Rage trilogy is also absent from this collection in the wake of its removal from Western versions of Sonic Gems Collection.

Although mentioned in passing, the collection does not include the first Genesis Shinobi game, The Revenge of Shinobi, possibly due to copyright issues surrounding the inclusion of Spider-Man as a boss character at the end of Stage 6.

The absence of the Streets of Rage series as well as The Revenge of Shinobi might also have to do with all those games featuring soundtracks by Yuzo Koshiro. It is especially notable because unlike Streets of Rage where he contributed the soundtracks for all three games, The Revenge of Shinobi was the only game in the Mega Drive/Genesis incarnations of the Shinobi series he composed the music for, and it is the only game of that series missing from the collection. This makes licensing issues concerning his work seem like a possible reason for leaving these games (which are among the most popular on the Sega Genesis) out. These licensing issues would be eventually solved, however, as all three Streets of Rage titles appeared in the follow-up compilation, Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection and The Revenge of Shinobi would be released on the Wii's Virtual Console with an altered version of the Spider-Man boss.

Similarly, this collection is the first release of some Genesis titles, especially Phantasy Star IV, on a non-Sega console, as it has only been seen twice before – on its native Genesis, and in the Phantasy Star Collection on the Sega Saturn (available only in Japan).

While for the most part emulation of the games themselves have no defects, some people have noticed that sound emulation in some games is not exactly the same as their Genesis incarnations. This compilation was developed by Digital Eclipse, whose more recent compilations have become known for emulation problems. Regularly noted examples are the "Spindash" sound in Sonic the Hedgehog 2 fading out in a peculiar way, sound effects in Sonic the Hedgehog and Columns sounding slightly off, the special stage victory theme in the Sonic games missing, as well as no change in tempo when obtaining Power Sneakers in either game, wrong/missing death screams in Golden Axe and the sequel, a bizarre sounding Star Handle noise in Ristar, in addition to Awaueck's "bad singing" being muted when Ristar fights him as the game's fourth boss and the "Victory Theme" in Phantasy Star IV not stopping the battle music. It should also be noted that Golden Axe 3 suffers badly from poor sound emulation compared to all the other games, and a few games had minor graphical modifications, such as in Sonic the Hedgehog when the screen sometimes flashes when Sonic is underwater and in Phantasy Star IV: The End of the Millennium when the screen sometimes flashes when a character was poisoned. Some of the sound effects in Altered Beast Arcade are off too, including the effect when grabbing a spirit ball power-up, hitting most enemies, and some of the beast secondary attacks (such as the Weredragon laser barrier).

Most of these errors have been fixed in a new enhanced version Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, which allowing high definition playing through scaling-up and filters.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.