Gunbird 2

Gunbird 2

North American Dreamcast cover art
Developer(s) Psikyo
Kuusoukagaku
Publisher(s) Capcom
Designer(s) Masato Natsumoto (characters)
Series Gunbird
Platform(s) Arcade, Dreamcast, PlayStation 2
Release date(s) Arcade
  • JP 1998-12-??

Dreamcast

  • JP 2000-03-09
  • NA 2000-11-17
  • PAL 2001-02-02
Genre(s) Scrolling shooter
Mode(s) Single player, 2 player co-op
Cabinet Upright
Display Raster, 224 x 320 pixels (vertical), 5120 colors

Gunbird 2 is a 2D scrolling shooter developed by Psikyo and released by Capcom in 1998 as a sequel to the original Gunbird (1994).

Plot

Seven warriors are challenged to head on a quest to find three powerful elements of Sun, Moon and Stars. Whoever brings the elements to the Potion God will be rewarded the legendary Almighty Potion and all its magical powers.[1]

Through gameplay cutscenes (and endings) it appears that the zany, uproarious (and at times rather adult) humor has considerably increased since the original Gunbird. The game has numerous similarities to the Parodius series, including the final boss in the game, a cartoon elephant playing a trumpet.

Characters

Boss characters:

Gameplay

In-game screenshot

There are seven stages in each game loop (two loops total). The first three stages are randomly chosen from possible four. At the second loop, enemies fire denser bullet patterns moving at faster speeds. Stage 2-1 takes place at the only stage not available in 1st loop, instead of the 1-1 counterpart. After completing the first loop with only one player, player can choose one of two choices for a wish with magic potion, with unique ending for each choice. If 1st loop is completed with two players, a combination-specific ending is played.

This is the first Psikyo shooter to feature medal-chaining: picking up 2000 point medals (when they flash) repeatedly results in a slight point increase and a coin chain, recorded separately from the score. This was later featured in Strikers 1945 III/Strikers 1999 and Strikers 1945 Plus.

The arcade game supports both English and Japanese languages, chosen via arcade board dip switch settings. The language setting is Japanese if dip switches are set to Japanese, English otherwise.

Dreamcast version

New fighters in the Sega Dreamcast, released in 2000, include Morrigan and Aine (an unlocked character). Other new features include Internet ranking, gallery, and voices during intermission.

The Dreamcast version received a score of 8.5/10 from Gaming Target.[3]

PlayStation 2 version

The PlayStation 2 version of the game was based on the arcade version.

Cancelled PlayStation Portable remake

A enhanced remake, titled Gunbird 2 Remix was announced by PM Studios on PlayStation Portable in 2009, and slated for an early 2010 release, exclusively in digital format.[4] However, no news have been heard since then, and it's considered vaporware as of 2015.

References

  1. Gunbird 2 Dreamcast manual.
  2. "Japanese mascots - Sato-chan - Muza-chan's Gate to Japan". Muza-chan.net. 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2014-02-04.
  3. Thomas Wilde, Gunbird 2, Gaming Target, August 21, 2001
  4. "PM Studios Brings Gunbird 2 To The PSP". Kotaku.com. Retrieved 2014-02-04.

External links