Planet Harriers
Planet Harriers | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Amusement Vision |
Publisher(s) | Sega |
Director(s) | Toshihiro Nagoshi |
Producer(s) | Toshihiro Nagoshi |
Designer(s) | Junichi Yamada |
Programmer(s) | Tetsuya Kaku |
Artist(s) | Mika Kojima |
Composer(s) |
|
Series | Space Harrier |
Platform(s) | Arcade |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | Rail shooter Third-person shooter |
Mode(s) | Single-player, Multiplayer |
Arcade system | Sega Hikaru |
Planet Harriers (Japanese: プラネットハリアーズ, Hepburn: Puranetto Hariāzu) is a 3D rail shooter arcade video game published by Sega, developed by its Amusement Vision division. It is part of the Space Harrier series. It was produced both as a sit-down twin cabinet and a stand-up single cabinet.
Gameplay
The game is based around a twin cabinet, which allows for two seated players to play simultaneous single-player games, or a networked two-player game. Control is through a joystick with a missile and bullet trigger, and view-change and bomb buttons on the main panel.
A player may select one of four characters: Glenn, X, Cory, or Nick. The character flies from an into-the-screen perspective, shooting oncoming enemies and missiles. In a two player game, the two characters may dock together in order to recover life.
Opa-Opa appears spinning above a defeated player offering a continue. This character is made playable with the Easter egg of moving the player selection over X, then Nick, Cory, Glenn, Cory, Nick, Cory, Glenn, X, Cory and then Glenn again.
Reception
In September 2000, IGN described Planet Harrier, running on the Sega Hikaru arcade system board, as "the unrivaled champion of videogame graphics ... there's never been as visually impressive a videogame as this", praising the long draw distance, "clean and crisp" image quality, speed of movement, large number of fast-moving objects, and "amazing" graphical style. They also praised the gameplay as "the fastest, most intense 3D shooter ever crafted".[1] In Japan, the February 1, 2001 issue of Game Machine lists it as the eleventh most-successful dedicated arcade game of the month.[2] A rumored GameCube port never materialized.[3]
See also
- Space Harrier
- Cyber Troopers Virtual-On Force, another arcade game based on the same arcade system.
References
- ^ a b IGN Staff (September 20, 2000). "JAMMA 2000: Hands on with Planet Harriers". Retrieved February 17, 2017.
- ^ "Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - 完成品夕イプのTVゲーム機 (Dedicated Videos)". Game Machine (in Japanese). No. 627. Amusement Press, Inc. 1 February 2001. p. 17.
- ^ "Planet Harriers on GameCube". IGN. May 14, 2001. Retrieved October 8, 2021.
Further reading
External links
- Official Sega website at the Wayback Machine (archived March 20, 2011)
- Planet Harriers at Killer List of Videogames
- CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja)
- Articles with short description
- Short description matches Wikidata
- Articles using Infobox video game using locally defined parameters
- Articles using Wikidata infoboxes with locally defined images
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Webarchive template wayback links
- 2000 video games
- Amusement Vision games
- Rail shooters
- Sega arcade games
- Arcade video games
- Arcade-only video games
- Video games developed in Japan
- Cooperative video games
- Video game spin-offs
- Multiplayer and single-player video games