Dangun Feveron

Dangun Feveron

Arcade Flyer
Developer(s)
Publisher(s)

Arcade

  • WW: Nihon System

PlayStation 4

Platform(s) Arcade, PlayStation 4
Release

Arcade

  • JP: September 17, 1998
  • WW: 1998

PlayStation 4

  • JP: April 28th, 2017

[1]

Genre(s) Manic shooter
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system CAVE 68000
CPU Motorola 68000 @ 16 MHz
Sound Yamaha YMZ280B @ 16.9344 MHz
Display Raster, vertical orientation, 240 x 320 pixels, 2048 colors, 57.55 Hz refresh rate

Dangun Feveron (弾銃フィーバロン, Dangan Fībaron, lit. "Bullet Gun Feveron"), also known by its overseas title Fever SOS, is a vertical scrolling shooter game developed by Cave and published by Nihon System Inc. in 1998. The gameplay is typical of manic shooters, with numerous swarms of enemies onscreen at any given time, and bosses that shoot intimidatingly large clusters of bullets. Unique to this title, the score of the game is disco music, which is a particularly unusual choice for a shoot 'em up. In April 2016, Cave announced that M2 is porting Dangun Feveron for the first time to a home console, the PlayStation 4, as part of their M2 Shot Triggers publishing label.[2][3][4]

Gameplay

Dangun Feveron PCB with art

Dangun Feveron offers a wide degree of customization in gameplay. Player is prompted to select how fast they want the ship to move, choose one of three rapid-fire weapons, and one of three sustained-fire weapons. This allows the player to tailor the ship to individual needs, be it a fast-flying speeder with a widespread shot to quickly handle enemy squadrons, or a ship with lower speed to dodge bullets carefully, and concentrated firepower to destroy single foes faster.

Fighters
Powerful shot
Items

Scoring system

Dangun Feveron features another unique gameplay mechanism, the SOS System. For every enemy destroyed in a timely manner, so-called "cyborgs" will appear. Cyborgs can be rescued by touching them with the player's ship. If left alone, cyborgs will drift slowly toward the bottom of the screen, then move back up towards the top, after which they will disappear completely. For each cyborg obtained, the value of enemies will increase by one point, so long as no cyborgs escape off the top of the screen; if this happens, the value will be reset.

Assuming no cyborgs have escaped, most enemies are worth the number of saved cyborgs plus one. For instance, destroying an ordinary enemy after saving 19 cyborgs will accordingly award 20 points. Larger enemies have a point value equal to five successive standard enemies plus 10; downing one such enemy after having captured 49 cyborgs bestows 50+51+52+53+54=260 points. Bosses are worth the value of a standard enemy multiplied by the number of cyborgs captured throughout the entire stage. If a player was awarded 99 cyborgs throughout the stage, captured every single one, and then defeated the boss, player would receive 99*100=9,900 points.

If all lives are lost and play is continued, the enemy value and rescue count are both reset.

References

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