Arcus Odyssey

Arcus Odyssey

North American Genesis cover art by Kazutoshi Yamane
Developer(s) Wolf Team
Publisher(s) Renovation Products
Distributor(s) Renovation Products
Producer(s) Masaaki Uno
David Izat
Masahiro Akishino
Designer(s) Mutsumi Inomata
Programmer(s) Fumiaki Fukaya
Artist(s) Kazuhiro Nagata
Yuji Ushijima
Akiko Higurashi
Writer(s) T. Yamada
Composer(s) Motoi Sakuraba
Series Arcus
Platform(s) Sharp X68000
Mega Drive
Super NES
Release date(s) June 14, 1991 (Gen)
October 22, 1993 (SNES)
Genre(s) Action role-playing
Mode(s) multiplayer

Arcus Odyssey is an action role-playing game video game developed by Wolf Team and released by Renovation Products in 1991 for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis and Sharp X68000 and in 1993 for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. The game features an isometric perspective and cooperative gameplay,[1] as well hack and slash gameplay. It tells the story of four heroes trying to thwart the return of an evil sorceress. The game received positive reviews, especially the original Genesis version.

Arcus Odyssey is part of the Arcus franchise, which also included Arcus in 1988, Arcus II: Silent Symphony in 1989, and Arcus III in 1991. A North American version for the SNES was planned, but it was cancelled following Sega's acquisition of Renovation Products (American publisher for Wolf Team and Telenet games). It was released only in Japan with the title Arcus Spirits, and was also planned to be released in Europe by Loriciels.[2]

Gameplay

In Arcus Odyssey, the player takes on the role of one of four different characters, and proceeds through each level in order. The players may move, attack, defend using a projectile-blocking shield, and use a variety of offensive, defensive, and recovery items and magic, all of which can be found in chests scattered throughout the levels. Some levels require the players to accomplish sub-quests in order to proceed, such as extinguishing a fire blocking the door to the next level; other levels give the player an ally.

The game primarily has an isometric view, although the player's characters can move freely in eight directions. After defeating most bosses, players receive a power boost; this boost either gives them more health or more power.

Plot

Hundreds of years ago, the powerful dark sorceress Castomira sought to destroy the land of Arcus and remake it a place of chaos and darkness. The only person powerful enough to stop her was Princess Leaty, a good sorceress and the granddaughter to the legendary King of Light. Leaty challenged Castomira and the two fought for days on end, but the powers of the light eventually overwhelmed the witch, who was banished to the Dark World for all eternity. Foreseeing the possible return of Castomira, Leaty created a magical sword capable known as "The Power of Leaty" and trusted its safekeeping with the King of Arcus.

Now, a millennium later, Castomira's followers have stolen the Sword in order to revive their mistress as the power of darkness grows stronger by the day. Only the powers of four brave heroes can prevent a second coming of Castomira and return peace to Arcus. They are: Jedda Chef the swordsman, Diana Fireya the archer; Erin Gashuna the warrior-maiden; and Bead Shia the mage. At the end of the game, the players are given a choice between either using the sword to defeat Castomira or helping the witch regain her power.[3][4]

Reception

Arcus Odyssey was mostly well received. David Upchurch of ACE scored it 863/1000, writing: "To put it simply, Arcus Oddysey is one of the finest examples of the arcade adventure genre too appear on the Megadrive."[5] Sega Pro gave this "spectacular" and "addictive" game an enthusiastic review and a score of 92%, praising its "unbelievably colorful and varied" graphics, "incredibly realistic" level layout, "terrific" music, and "excellent" sound.[6] Dragon gave the game 4 out of 5 stars and commented: "A few gamers might not enjoy having to explore twisted caves in order to attain to the next higher level; hackers would probably prefer to blow everything to bits. Although this product is not entirely original, Renovation is offering consumers quite a successful game in Arcus Odyssey."[7] German magazine Video Games gave it 63%.[8]

GamePro criticized the lack of improvements on the SNES from the Genesis version, describing the graphics as "small and crowded" with little detail or variety and concluded, "if you're looking for an interesting game with little to offer but average graphics and better-than-average music, then this is for you. True RPG fans, though, may want to ... hold out for meatier titles."[9] Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the SNES version a 7 out of 10, commenting that it "has an interesting perspective and enough characters to keep things interesting."[10] Non-English review scores of the SNES version included 75% from Hobby Consolas (Spain)[11] and 69% from Micromania (France).[12]

References

  1. Buchanan, Levi (2008-06-17). "Top 10 Renovation Games". IGN.com. Retrieved 2009-11-06.
  2. "SNES Force - Issue 06 (1993-11) (Impact Magazines) (GB)". Archive.org. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
  3. "Ending for Arcus Odyssey - Kill Castomira (Genesis/Nomad)". Vgmuseum.com. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
  4. "Ending for Arcus Odyssey - Help Castomira (Genesis/Nomad)". Vgmuseum.com. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
  5. "ACE - Issue 54 (1992-03) (Future Publishing) (GB)". Archive.org. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
  6. Damian "nut" Butt, "Pro Review: Arcus Odyssey". Sega Pro issue 2 (December 1991).
  7. Lesser, Hartley; Lesser, Patricia & Lesser, Kirk (February 1992). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (178): 57–64.
  8. "Video Games (1993-10)(Markt & Technik)(DE)". Archive.org. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  9. "ProReview: Arcus Odyssey". GamePro (55) (IDG). February 1994. p. 142.
  10. "Arcus Odyssey Review". Electronic Gaming Monthly (53) (EGM Media, LLC). December 1993. p. 44.
  11. "Hobby Consolas 026". Archive.org. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  12. "Micromania Segunda Epoca (Spanish) Issue 66". Archive.org. Retrieved 16 January 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, August 10, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.