8/8/2023 0 Comments Gradius 2 impossible![]() However, they didn’t rebalance the number of power-up orbs. Konami also implemented the Gradius-style power-up system for this version of Life Force. Most of the music is the same, but the themes for stage two, four, and five are different. There are many more voices, which announce the stage and make various other comments, like yelling “Fire! Fire!” as you carve through the membrane leading to the first boss. Some of the other bosses and enemies have been redesigned to look more organic, but most are identical. The final stage is exactly the same, as they didn’t even try to make it look biological. The fourth area is now the “liver” zone and barely looks any different. The first level basically looks the same, but the second level is now the “kidney” stage, with a different background, and the asteroids changed into “kidney stones.” The third stage is now the “stomach” zone, and the flames have been recolored blue to look more like stomach acid. It keeps the power-up system and most of the graphics from Salamander, except the outer space background is replaced with a webbed vein background, giving the impression that it’s supposed to take place in the body of a giant creature.Īpparently someone thought that this was so brilliant that they took the concept, applied even more changes, and re-released it in Japan, also using the name Life Force. They also changed some of the graphics, and renamed it Life Force. To wit, they added a brief story screen, where rather than destroying a gigantic monster, you were saving a bio-mechanical warrior called Sentinel XR1 from a brain tumor that had infested its body. ![]() What if they took the first level of the game (the one where you fly into the mouth of a huge monster) and turned that into the concept for the entire game? Instead of simply fighting through disjointed levels, you’d be playing a shoot-em-up version of the movie Fantastic Voyage. ![]() ![]() When Salamander was brought to America, Konami had a great idea. At least it’s easier to regain your arsenal when you’re killed, because you can grab any Options left behind from your previous life, The screen scrolls pretty quickly, which also makes things more difficult. Gradius always gave you a chance to learn patterns, but Salamander has a tendency to completely flood the screen with projectiles. There are some tricks to get by these areas, but some are massively difficult unless you have a full arsenal of weapons. Still, the difficulty level gets pretty high in the later segments of the game. However, if you have a second player, you can continue indefinitely up until the last stage, where everything is cut off. Once you run out of lives completely in single-player mode, you can’t continue anymore. Unlike most arcade games, putting in an extra quarter will simply add lives, up to a pre-defined limit. The checkpoint system is gone too, so whenever you die, you’ll immediately restart back in the action. The soundtrack was composed by Miki Higashino, who also composed Gradius. Compositionally, it’s pretty good, but it sounds really tinny and weak. The music all comes from an FM synthesizer. There’s a synthesized voice that announces the names of the weapons that are picked up, as well as the bosses’ weak points. One of the most memorable is the first, Golem, which is a huge floating brain with an eye in the center, and tentacles that wave around in the direction of your ship. The backgrounds are a lot more detailed, and there’s actually more than one boss this time around. The graphics are fantastic, especially for 1986, and it’s amazing to see the artistic advances within the single year between Gradius and Salamander. After killing it, the scrolling speeds up, and you need to maneuver through a set of tight corridors before you can escape. If you don’t kill it before it scrolls off the screen, you need to replay the whole stage. Like in all of the main Gradius games, the final boss – a big, red orb called the Zelos Force – is defenseless, but the screen continues to scroll forward when you reach it. The sixth zone is an enemy base, where you have to fight a whole wave of Gradius ship bosses, before facing off against some leaping Moai heads. The fourth stage heavily resembles the first area of Gradius, complete with the same graphical style and enemies, while the fifth stage is another boring asteroids field. The third level is a flaming tunnel, complete with huge flares that blast out at an arc. The second stage is an asteroid field, and introduces a famed recurring enemy, the Tetran, which is similar to the Big Core boss from Gradius, but has four multi-segmented arms that spin around. The first stage takes place in a huge biological monster, where you fly past a set of chomping teeth and into its body. There are six stages in total, which alternate behind horizontal and vertical viewpoints.
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