F-1 Hero MD
F1 Hero MD | |
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Japanese box art (Sega Mega Drive / Genesis version) | |
Developer(s) |
Aisystem Tokyo (Sega Genesis) [1] System 3 (Game Boy / Nintendo Entertainment System) [2][3] |
Publisher(s) |
Sega Mega Drive:
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Composer(s) |
NES version Neil Baldwin |
Platform(s) | Sega Mega Drive,[1] Game Boy,[2] Nintendo Entertainment System[3] |
Release date(s) |
Sega Mega Drive:
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Genre(s) | Racing |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
F1 Hero MD (F-1 ヒーローMD) is a Formula One video game endorsed by Satoru Nakajima that was released in 1992 for the Sega Mega Drive. The North American and European versions of the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis game are known as Ferrari Grand Prix Challenge in honor of the Ferrari brand of racing vehicles.
Gameplay
Sega Mega Drive
The Sega Mega Drive version of the game includes a Grand Prix mode, a free practice mode, and a time attack mode. The team and player names are close to the real thing without violating copyright laws. Either one or two players can compete and the game has a password method of saving the game. In addition to traditional tracks used in the 1992 Formula One season, the player can also play in bonus race tracks. Autopolis, Fuji Speedway, an oval training course, and a treacherous road course originally designed by the programmers of the video game used in the Japanese version.
It is one of only three Mega Drive games that supports the AX-1E analog controller.
The North American version uses the former location of the Long Beach Grand Prix, the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Oyster Bay, and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway as American-specific substitutes for the tracks considered "local" to the Japanese. However, the graphics used for the backgrounds are identical to each other in both versions of the game.
Nintendo Entertainment System/Game Boy
The title Ferrari Grand Prix Challenge was also ported for the Game Boy and Nintendo Entertainment System. It was developed by System 3 and published by Acclaim in North America and Europe. Coconuts Japan published the game in Japan under the title Ferrari (フェラーリ).
The Nintendo Entertainment System version of the game is a simplified version that allows players to practice up to six laps or qualify for every Formula One race of the season using metric units (kilometres per hour instead of miles per hour). It was one of the few 8-bit Formula One video games to adequately represent the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve as having an urban background along with several other urban race tracks represented in the 1990 Formula One season with the exception that Circuit de Catalunya is presented in this version as the round in Spain, alltough Jerez hosted the 1990 Spanish Grand Prix. Tire wear is possible resulting in trips to the pit crew for maintenance and repairs. A radio allows communication with the crew chief; he will advise whether repairs are necessary. The top speed of the vehicle is 335 kilometres per hour and turbo is not used in the game.
Before the first qualifying session can take place, the player must insert his name and his nationality. The name can be up to 10 characters long and the country has to fit into a three-character field. Since the game doesn't verify if the three-letter code matches up to a real nationality, it doesn't matter if the player makes up a nationality for a fictional country.
References
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