Hydlide

Hydlide

Front cover of the MSX version of Hydlide.
Developer(s) T&E Soft
Publisher(s) T&E Soft
FCI (NES)
Platform(s) PC-6001, PC-8801, MSX, MSX2 FM-7, PC-9801, Sharp X1, Famicom / NES
Release date(s) PC-6001 & PC-8801 MSX MSX2 FM-7
  • JP May 1985
PC-9801
  • JP November 1985
Famicom / NES
  • JP March 18, 1986
  • NA June 1989
Genre(s) Action role-playing game
Mode(s) Single-player

Hydlide (ハイドライド Haidoraido) is a 1984 action role-playing video game developed and published by T&E Soft. It was originally released for the NEC PC-6001 and NEC PC-8801 computer in 1984, in Japan only;[1] ports for the MSX, MSX2 (a separate port released on 3.5" floppy), FM-7 and NEC PC-9801 were released the following year.[2] A Nintendo Famicom version was first released under the name Hydlide Special on March 18, 1986 in Japan; three years later, in June 1989, that version saw a North American release for the Nintendo Entertainment System by FCI, its title having been returned to simply Hydlide.[2]

Storyline

In the kingdom of Fairyland, three magic jewels were enshrined in the palace to maintain peace in the kingdom. One day, an evil man broke into the palace and stole one of the three magic jewels. Without the third jewel, the two remaining jewels lost their magic sparkle. The magic spell that sealed the power of Boralis, the most vicious demon in the kingdom, was broken. During the turmoil which followed, the last two jewels were stolen. Boralis cast a special magic on Princess Ann, turning her into three fairies, and hid her somewhere in the kingdom. He then let loose a horde of monsters across the land and became the ruler of the kingdom.

Finally, the young knight Jim stood up and took action to restore peace in the kingdom. He bravely made his way into the wilderness in full armor to fight the monsters...

Characters

Legacy

Screenshot of the original PC-8801 version.

Hydlide is one of the first Japanese role-playing video games.[1] The game appears to have been influenced by Dragon Slayer, The Tower of Druaga,[3] and the original Ultima, though Hydlide failed to capture the same attention as the aforementioned titles beyond Japan. It was initially well received and considered an innovator when released in Japan back in 1984. Some of these innovations include being able to switch between attack mode and defense mode, quick save and load options which can be done at any moment of the game through the use of passwords as the primary back-up, and the introduction of a health regeneration mechanic where health and magic slowly regenerate when standing still. However, the game took several years to release in America, by which time The Legend of Zelda had a more refined, advanced take on the action-RPG formula; thus, Hydlide was criticized by American audiences as primitive in comparison.[1] The game had an influence on the acclaimed action RPG series, Ys, which for example, uses a similar health-regeneration mechanic.[1][4] The recharging health mechanic first introduced by Hydlide in 1984 would, decades later, become a common mechanic widely used in many video games.[4]

The NES version of Hydlide is also infamously known for its repetitive music that bears similarity to John Williams' Indiana Jones theme.[1] This is because it is one of the only two RPG/Adventure games made for the Family Computer (NES) without bankswitched memory; the other, Enix's adventure game PORTOPIA Renzoku Satsujin Jiken, has no music at all.

Sequels

Hydlide had several follow-ups:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Kurt Kalata & Robert Greene. "Hydlide". Hardcore Gaming 101. Retrieved 2011-05-01.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Hydlide". GameFAQs. Retrieved 16 February 2012.
  3. Kurt Kalata, Dragon Slayer, Hardcore Gaming 101
  4. 4.0 4.1 Szczepaniak, John (7 July 2011). "Falcom: Legacy of Ys". GamesTM (111): 152–159 [153]. Retrieved 2011-09-07. (cf. Szczepaniak, John (July 8, 2011). "History of Ys interviews". Hardcore Gaming 101. Retrieved 6 September 2011.)
  5. Hydlide II: Shine of Darkness at MobyGames

External links