Author Topic: Avenger (Turbo CD) - Under Defeat's under-rated, and great, TCD predecessor  (Read 255 times)

A Black Falcon

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 310
I've done various game/system reviews/opinion summaries that I've posted on other forums (mostly posted on Sega-16 and NeoGAF).  But this one is TG16 related, and I do post here now, so I thought I'd post it here too... I changed the first paragraph (most of it was quite unnecessary on this forum :p), but the rest is the same as posted elsewhere.


Review: Avenger (TurboGrafx CD, Japan only release)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Intro

The Turbo CD is awesome, I wish more people in the West had access to it so that they could see how great a system it is... but even among the TG16/PCE fan community, this game is pretty heavily under-rated.  It's actually quite good!

Background
Quote

The box does a good job of showing what the game is like.


Avenger is a shmup from Laser Soft, which was one of Telenet Japan's many divisions, along with Riot, Reno, Renovation, and Wolf Team.  Telenet supported the Genesis and SNES as well, but while they did make cartridge games, they were also an early pioneer in CD gaming.  From 1989-1994, they supported the Turbo CD and then Sega CD as well.  Telenet was the first third party to support the Turbo CD, which was the first ever CD-based gaming platform.  However, several years later, Telenet fell apart.  By 1995 Telenet was collapsing; Wolf Team was bought by Namco (they became Namco's Tales Studio).  Renovation, their American publishing arm which had focused almost exclusively on Genesis and Sega CD games, was bought by Sega.  At the time they were just starting to support the SNES, so they released only one SNES game.  Renovation never supported the Turbografx, sadly.  Too bad.  NEC released a few of Telenet's TG16/CD games, most notably Valis II and III, but Avenger, like most of their games, stayed Japan-only.  The rest of Telenet either shut down or became a shadow of its former self, as Telenet itself devolved into being pretty much a gambling games only studio from about 1995 on, and closed in 2007.  Looking at their games from their 1989-1994 time as a major console games publisher, Telenet's games are often flawed, and are not as polished as, say, Nintendo's, but they made quite a few but while they lasted they made some interesting games. 

-------------
Review
-------------
Quote

Title screen.

So, on to the actual game.  Avenger is not one of Telenet's more popular releases, for sure, but I at least think that it is an under-appreciated, quite high quality game.  This review will cover all major elements of the game, including the gameplay, weapons and upgrades, cutscenes, ingame graphics, options, and music.  Lastly, final thoughts and a grade for the game (since I have finished the game, so I think scoring it is reasonable).

Game Design
Quote

The city level (level 3 or 4) is the best-looking level in the game.


Avenger is a vertical shmup clearly inspired by Toaplan games like Kyukyoku Tiger/Twin Cobra, but it has one key original design feature: the aiming system.  Your helicopter rotates as you move right or left, and fires at the angle it is facing.  You can aim up to about a 45 degree angle in either direction.  By holding the II button while firing with I, your futuristic helicopter will lock at the angle you're currently firing at, so that as you move around the screen you continue to fire in the locked direction while moving wherever.  This is the key design decision Under Defeat would reuse, over 15 years later.  That game is certainly better (and much, MUCH better looking) than this one, but any Under Defeat fan should find Avenger interesting.  It's important to note, though, that you must leave the Turbo switches on your controller OFF for this game, or the controls will not work right!  The lock won't work with the switches on.  You have autofire anyway, so it's not needed. 

Quote

From the last level, this is one of the harder parts of the game, if you're not at full power... but I did eventually figure out how to get through this corridor safely.  Watch those bullet patterns!  Also note the angled fire from your copter.


Apart from that, though, Avenger definitely feels inspired by Toaplan games and other major '80s shmups like, perhaps, Raiden, though this is not a "Raiden-style" game like Cyber-Core (TG16) is.  The game is a vertical-scrolling shooter, and feels somewhat like Kyukyoku Tiger (Twin Cobra), except not quite as hard, and better looking than that game is.  The game has about eight stages, but is somewhat nonlinear -- you will play all of the levels every time, but can choose which order to play the middle levels in (2-3, 4-5, 6-7).  You choose one or the other, then will go to the other stage next.  It's a minor, but nice, addition.  Avenger heavily relies on memorization.  Each time you play the game you will get better and learn more, so your first few times through the game might be tough.  This isn't the hardest shmup, though, s stick with it and it is doable.  Even so, the game can be challenging in that classic shmup way because of how it demands memorization, and also punishes you for dying.  I think the difficulty level is balanced very well, though.  This game is not nearly as hard as Kyokyoku Tiger/Twin Cobra, thankfully.  I completed the game after some practice, and I'm definitely not the best shmup player around.  Overall Avenger isn't easy, but it's not super hard either -- it's just right.    While many enemies shoot at you, bosses and some certain enemy types shoot preset patterns instead.  These are not bullet-hell-impossible, though; with a little practice, and watching, I could figure them out.  There are often safe spots in a pattern, so look for them.  I like the bullet pattern design in this game for sure.  It's good.

Weapons and Upgrades
Quote

Level 2 or 3, the canyon.  Hit the sides and you will blow up!  Only some levels have instant-death walls, but this is one of them.  So watch out.

Avenger lets you choose which weapon/item you want for each of your copter's three slots: main weapon, secondary weapon, and special ability.  Helpfully, the weapon-select screen is entirely in English, even though the between-mission story text is in Japanese.  There are three things you will unlock in each category over the course of the game; at the start you have no choices, but by the end, or if you use that "unlock all weapons from the start" code you can find on GameFAQs and elsewhere, you have some choices for sure.  The three main guns are a machine gun, a laser, or rockets.  I like the rockets at first, then lasers later, though all three are good.  You don't start with a secondary weapon, but will get homing missiles at the start of the second level, and then later get a directional gun (useless) and side gunpods.  I find the homing missiles and gunpods both useful in different levels.  For special abilities, you start with one which destroys all bullets on screen (3 uses per level).  The other two come much later in the game.  One is a one-time-use invincibility item, and the last a two-uses megabomb (finally!).  You also have shielding on your copter which can take 5 hits before you are destroyed, which is very handy. 

As in Toaplan games, or others, one enemy ship type drops powerups when destroyed.  The drop will cycle between different letters.  "R" restores one hit point (up to a max of 5).  The others upgrade your main weapon and upgrade your special weapon (only appears in level 2 and on).  You cannot upgrade or restore your special item, so use them carefully.  Your secondary weapon maxes out with only a couple of powerups, but the main gun takes four or five to hit max power, so try to stay alive.  If you die, though, you get game over and will have to continue and start the level over.  You have infinite continues in Avenger, but can't save your progress, and this game can get hard at times if you die, due to losing all of your powerups.  This is an oldschool game, and getting reverted to base power HURTS.  Even though you can take multiple hits, which adds an very helpful margin for error to the game, it's easy to take damage quickly once the hits start coming.  Some skill will be required, though again, the difficulty here is reasonable overall.  Tough, but reasonable.  Overall, the weapon and upgrade systems are classic, and work well.  It is very annoying how once in a while the upgrade icons will fly off the screen before going to the powerup you need, though, so watch them carefully and try to destroy the ships carrying them as far up the screen as you can!

Cutscenes
Quote

Beginning of the intro.  Poor city...

This game released in 1990, still in the early years of CD gaming.  So, the cutscenes here are important.  Telenet did a nice job with the presentation in Avenger.  Unlike some early Turbo CD shmups (Legion, Daisenpuu Custom, Sidearms Special...), the game has not only CD-audio music, but also has voiced introduction and ending cutscenes.  The voice acting is in Japanese, but the basics of what is going on are simple enough to understand: with our high-tech futuristic helicopter, defeat the badguys attacking your country.  Beyond that, apparently the story is about a military commander from your nation who became a traitor and is trying to take a large carrier, which was supposed to be your helicopter's base, to the enemy. You have to stop him, and the carrier.  As with most Turbo CD games the intro and ending are "animated" in a very limited fashion.  The Turbo CD has only 64KB of RAM by default, and this game released before the RAM-expanding Super or Arcade Cards, so animation in cutscenes is limited and cutscenes have frequent black screens for loading.  Still, the two cutscenes look nice enough. 

Options

Avenger has no options or settings, unfortunately.  This is a common issue in Turbografx games, and probably comes from NES-era design since most NES games work like that as well.  The game does have cheatcodes, but only to let you have all weapons from the start or for invincibility.  That first code is nice, though, for trying out after you've beaten the game.  Beyond that though, all you can do is start playing.

Ingame Graphics
Quote

Beginning of the first level.  Yes, it looks bland.

Once you get into the game, you see what is perhaps the most-criticized element of Avenger: the bland in-game background graphics.  I first played this game, emulated, several years ago, because I heard that it controlled like Under Defeat for the Dreamcast, a game I absolutely love.  Well, I saw how bland these graphics look compared to other, later Turbo CD games, and didn't play this much at all.  After finally getting my Turbo CD fixed, though, I made Avenger one of the first import games I bought, because it was something I wanted to play for sure, once I had the actual system.  I'm glad I did; the game is fun, despite the mediocre background art, and it's cheap too.

Once you look beyond the backgrounds, however, Avenger actually looks okay.  I think that the ship designs are good, and while the ingame ship graphics aren't quite at the level of the cinema scene ship graphics, they still look nice.  Look at the ship designs in the various screenshots above; This is no Nexzr, for sure, but I think they look okay to good.  The various laser bolts and bullets are well-drawn and large as well.  I think Avenger gets something of a bad rap for its graphics -- play it for more than a couple of minutes and you'll see that there are some nice things here, graphically.  Get beyond the first impression and there is more here.  The gameplay is definitely the biggest draw here, but Avenger doesn't look THAT bad.  As I said earlier, the game at least looks quite a bit better than Kyukyoku Tiger's TG16 port, and some other HuCard shmups besides.  The best looking level is definitely the level set in a city at night; that one honestly looks nice.  Unfortunately there are a few too many bland desert levels, but still, I think the game looks okay.

Quote

An end-level screen.  These are nice.

While there are no cutscenes between the beginning and the end, there are Japanese-language text-only briefings befor missions, and nicely drawn static-image cinema scenes after them, with a fanfare, showing the level you just blasted through.  The "game over" screen is also nicely drawn.  Looking at reviews of this game these screens receive praise, but the ingame graphics are often harshly criticized.  And while it is true that many of the environments are bland, I think that the art design of the ships is pretty good, and levels like the city or final level look decent as well.  There are also some interesting boss designs, and nice big flashy lasers sometimes too.  Avenger's graphics aren't the greatest, but they are better than some of the critics suggest.

Audio
Avenger has a CD audio soundtrack, and it's good.  I don't know if I will really remember most of the songs in the game, but some of them are quite nice songs with do a very good job of backing the action and keeping the game more exciting.  I like the soundtrack, it's solid early-game-CD music, and I love this kind of stuff!  I will definitely be listening to this soundtrack sometimes in the future.  Composers who previously had only worked on sound chips suddenly had access to CDs and could do higher-quality music, but still were often thinking in terms of videogame music.  The results are often unique, and it's really unfortunate that the days of getting such soundtracks passed in favor of generic licensed soundtracks and the like.  Well, at least we still have stuff like Avenger.  The game doesn't have one of  the best TCD soundtracks, but it does have a solid, good one.  The sound effects are average; nothing special, but most games have okay sound effects I think.  Overall, the game looks okay and sounds good.  Youtube musical selection:


Final Thoughts
Avenger is a good game that I liked quite a bit.  Despite the frustration some of the harder parts of the game induced, I kept coming back to this game anyway until I finished it, which says something for sure!  I have probably thousands of games now I haven't finished, but this is one of the ones I quickly knew I'd be playing to completion.  It took a few weeks, but I accomplished that.  I am sure that I will replay this game, too -- it's quite fun, and I am certain to play it again, probably in the near future.  Avenger may not have the best graphics around, though they are better than, say, Kyuukyoku Tiger (Twin Cobra) on HuCard, but it has addictive, quality gameplay, and the game is well worth playing.  I'd highly recommend this to any Under Defeat fan, and recommend it generally as well.  This is a solid, fun, under-rated shmup.  B+.

Quote
Warning!  Ending spoiler.
http://img.gamefaqs.net/screens/5/c/0/gfs_5177_2_37_mid.jpg
[spoiler]Yes, in the ending, you learn that yo
ur helicopter's pilot is a woman.  This was secret up until the end.  The "twist" was probably inspired by other games of the time that did similar things, I assume, but it's a nice touch.  At the end you're shown the "use all weapons from the start" password, but this comes first.[/spoiler]


Finally, here's a Youtube LP someone did of the game, for anyone interested in seeing the whole game. 

shubibiman

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1832
Haven't read the whole review but the 1st time I played Under Defeat, I thought that gameplay was familiar to me. Avenger is indeed a good and underrated game but its design doesn't quite match up with its gameplay. I think that's why it's not considered as a great game.
« Last Edit: November 13, 2013, 05:44:41 PM by shubibiman »
Self proclamed Aldynes World Champion

esteban

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 24063
I enjoyed Avenger, and the only thing that makes it stand out from countless other games is, indeed, the targeting system. It takes some getting used to, but it works pretty well (not frustrating or annoying) since you must sweep back and forth to avoid enemies and attack the bastards.

That said, this game had potential to be much more...it is missing something.

Psychic Storm, which has a much nicer aesthetic presentation than Avenger, is also missing something.

I didn't bring up the Psychic Storm vs. Avenger comparison willy-nilly...I have a hole in my heart because these games should have been better. WHAT A DAMN WASTE.

Avenger is decent (I've nominated it as an under-rated game in the past). However, I fear only old-skool junkies will actually give it a chance.

FINALLY: I like the soundtrack. Yup.

http://archives.tg-16.com/music_database.htm?col=jp&val=ave
« Last Edit: November 14, 2013, 09:49:37 AM by esteban »
  |    | 

A Black Falcon

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 310
I enjoyed Avenger, and the only thing that makes it stand out from countless other games is, indeed, the targeting system. It takes some getting used to, but it works pretty well (not frustrating or annoying) since you must sweep back and forth to avoid enemies and attack the bastards.

Yeah, the weapon/aiming system is definitely the highlight of the game, and it's good.

[qute]That said, this game had potential to be much more...it is missing something.

Psychic Storm, which has a much nicer aesthetic presentation than Avenger, is also missing something.

I didn't bring up the Psychic Storm vs. Avenger comparison willy-nilly...I have a hole in my heart because these games should have been better. WHAT A DAMN WASTE. [/quote]
What, exactly, is this "something" you say the games are missing?  Gameplay?  Graphics?  Something undefined?  I mean, I would agree that the background graphics in Avenger are lacking, but the gameplay's great.  I love the weapon-aiming system, it was a good idea.

Quote
Avenger is decent (I've nominated it as an under-rated game in the past). However, I fear only old-skool junkies will actually give it a chance.

Perhaps so, but that's too bad because it is a good game.

Quote
FINALLY: I like the soundtrack. Yup.

http://archives.tg-16.com/music_database.htm?col=jp&val=ave

Yeah, the soundtrack is pretty good.

shubibiman

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1832
It lacks personality. The design is too common IMHO.
Self proclamed Aldynes World Champion