Blaze Fielding
Blaze Fielding | |
---|---|
Streets of Rage character | |
Blaze, as depicted in a promotional artwork for Bare Knuckle 3 | |
First game | Streets of Rage (1991) |
Designed by | Ayano Koshiro (SoR 2)[1] |
Voiced by | Ayano Koshiro and her friends (SoR 2)[2] |
Blaze Fielding (ブレイズ・フィールディング) is a player character in Sega's Streets of Rage series of beat 'em up games, introduced in the original Streets of Rage in 1991. She is playable in all three games, starting out as an ex-police officer in the first game, a dance instructor in the second and becoming a private detective by the third game. Blaze is a master of judo who helps her companions, Adam Hunter and Axel Stone, defeat the evil boss of the crime syndicate, Mr. X throughout all three games.
Appearances
Blaze Fielding made her debut in 1991's Streets of Rage (SoR) as a low-rank officer in the New York Police Department. Blaze is one of the three young cops who quit the city's corrupt police force in order to settle the rampage that has plagued the city and find out the responsible behind those events. Along with Adam Hunter and Axel Stone, she manages to defeat the syndicate leader (later named Mr. X) in his own headquarters.
In Streets of Rage 2, set one year later, Blaze, who has moved out of the city and became a dance teacher, discovers along with Axel and Adam's kid brother "Skate" that Adam has been kidnapped by Mr. X, who was believed to be dead in the previous battle, in order to lure Axel and Blaze to him in retaliation for his prior defeat. She and Axel set out to rescue their friend with Skate and a professional wrestler Max Thunder who is also one of Axel's friends. They manage to reach the hidden headquarters of the Syndicate on an isolated island and defeat Mr. X once again and free Adam in the end.
In Bare Knuckle III, the Japanese language version of Streets of Rage 3, Blaze, along with Axel, has rejoined the police force after the events of Streets of Rage 2. During the events of Bare Knuckle III, Axel and Blaze are being assigned to the leading two cases that will actually reveal to be interconnected: a Raxine explosion in the Wood Oak city that could be related to the Syndicate's activities, and the disappearance of General Petrov that could lead to a war between nations. They are being assisted by Adam, Skate and a mysterious ex-researcher Dr. Zan.
The English language version of Streets of Rage 3 (which features a slightly altered storyline, as well as an increased difficulty compared to the Japanese language version) has Blaze stay in the city after the events of Streets of Rage 2 and become a private detective. When informed by Dr. Zan that the next victim of the Syndicate's evil scheme will be her old friend, the Chief of Police, she immediately sets up a task force to go to his rescue.
Blaze also appears in the Streets of Rage comic, originally serialized in Sonic the Comic in 1993 and later published as Streets of Rage: Bad City Fighters. In the bonus story "Facts of Life" from Sonic the Poster Mag, Blaze and her friends Axel, Max and Skates are kidnapped by corrupt police officers, but before they can be executed a young honest cop releases her and she rescues the others. The main story shows how Blaze and the others quit the force and became vigilante crime-fighters.
Design and gameplay
Blaze wears a bright red headband, red leather jacket and red miniskirt in the first game, a red bra and miniskirt in the sequel, and the silver version of it in third game (red in Japan), along with boots and gloves.[3] Her jump kick animation was censored in the U.S. version SoR2 to not show her underwear, which surprised the Japanese development team.[4] While Blaze always has brown hair in-game, the SoR main screen, portrait and ending scene show her with black hair. She is the only character that kept her idle move (runs her hand through her hair) through the series. SoR stage-boss twin pair Onihime and Yasha, or Mona and Lisa in the English version, are palette swaps of Blaze's sprite set in this game[5] (they look distinctively different in SoR3). Backbone Entertainment's rejected pitch for a reboot of Street of Rage featured an updated look of Blaze based on her earlier appearances.[6]
Blaze is a fast-but-weak character in the first game,[5] but has become the series' "all-rounder" by the second game.[7] She mostly uses her powerful legs to fight[8] and is a judo expert, giving her a more powerful, body-slamming throw move than the other characters. With her balanced stats and good techniques, Blaze is commonly regarded as the best of the playable characters in SoR2[9][10][11] and SoR3.[12][13][14] Her special techniques in the later two games are a cartwheel kick Embukyaku (ダンスキック) and a chi blast attack Kikoushko (カイパーム, "Wind Blast" in SoR3); her Hishousouzan (フライングタロンスラッシュ, "Flying Double Cut" in SoR3) is a forward somersault to stun enemies with her fists.[15] Her special moves have been compared to these of Street Fighter characters Ryu[16] and Guile.[9] She is the only character that performs a special weapon move in SoR2 (a double-hit with a knife).[17]
Reception
Blaze Fielding was well received, noted for being one of the first strong female heroines in video games, especially on Sega platforms and in the beat 'em up genre,[18][19] which Violet Berlin described as "a welcome change" when she "spoke out for the girls" in 1993.[20] According to Brazilian Gamers in 1993, Blaze has already been "acclaimed by game maniacs as one of the muses of games;"[21] German Mega Fun called her the strongest "video game babe" after by Chun-Li.[22] GameZone's Nick Akerman ranked Blaze as the third toughest female character in gaming in 2008,[23] as did the staff of MeriStation in 2015.[24] TechRaptor's Georgina Young included this "fan favorite" on her 2015 list of top six "feminist female protagonists" in video games.[25]
The staff of Retro Gamer chose Blaze as one of the classic "ingredients needed to make the ultimate scrolling fighter" as the "Player 2 character" (Player 1's being Mike Haggar from Final Fight).[26] IGN Spain put up Blaze and Tyris Flare from Golden Axe to represent the beat 'em up genre in their 2013 list of top ten "classic game heroines".[27]
She was also noted for her sex appeal, in particular for the upskirt animation frames,[28] removal of which in America was one early instances of sexual content censored in video games.[29] Famitsu described it as a Japanese fan "dogma" of "Blaze=panties" while discussing the Western censorship.[4] Digital Press' Karl Youngman featured Blaze in his 1994 article "Classic Babes in Videogames" as a representative of a 'biker chick' trope, opining she has best legs in video games and stating that after seeing her he "didn't care if I ever saw another 'real' girl again,"[30] and a Famitsu reviewer admitted to "worship" Blaze for both her fighting technique and her sexiness.[31] In 2011, GamesRadar's Jim Sterling recalled this "16-bit stunner" as "one of the sexiest sprites ever."[32]
Computer & Video Games compared the "gorgeous" Blaze to their own Yvette Nicholls,[33] and USgamer's Jeremy Parish speculated Final Fight 3's Lucia might have been "Capcom's answer to Streets of Rage favorite Blaze, wearing her short shorts and a tiny vest over a crop-top as she leaps and kicks foes."[34] Italian magazine Mega Console compared Blaze to the superheroine Wonder Woman.[35] Hip-hop producer and DJ Justin Smith better known as Just Blaze was inspired by Streets of Rage.[36]
References
- ↑ "Ancient-blog 3Dベア・ナックルII配信記念特別企画【パート1】". Ancgames.blog28.fc2.com. 2015-04-22. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "shmuplations.com". Shmuplations.com. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
- ↑ Mean Machines Sega 20 (June 1994), page 48.
- 1 2 文・取材:ライター 馬波レイ 撮影:カメラマン 小森大輔 (2015-07-10). "『3D ベア・ナックルII』セガ 3D復刻プロジェクト注目作の顛末をオリジナル開発者と移植スタッフとが語らう【特別企画】(1/5) - ファミ通.com". Famitsu.com. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
- 1 2 Retro Gamer 133, page 70.
- ↑ "Streets of Rage, ESWAT art for reboots that never were". Destructoid.com. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "Streets of Rage 2 Review - IGN". Uk.ign.com. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "Mean Machines Sega Magazine Issue 17". Archive.org. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
- 1 2 Mean Machines Sega 3 (December 1992), page 138.
- ↑ Retro Gamer 77, page 63.
- ↑ Retro Gamer 52, page 46.
- ↑ Sega Visions 20 (August–September 1994), page 28.
- ↑ Sega Magazin 5/1994, page 86.
- ↑ Sega Pro (Germany) 7/1994, page 50
- ↑ Sega Pro (Germany) 3/1993, page 26.
- ↑ MEGA 4 (January 1993), page 38.
- ↑ Reed, Kristan (2007-09-01). "Streets of Rage 2 •". Eurogamer.net. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "SEGA Force Mega Nr. 2-7". Archive.org. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
- ↑ Langshaw, Mark (2015-07-18). "Streets of Rage retrospective: Feeling the impact of the Sega brawler - Gaming Feature". Digital Spy. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
- ↑ MEGA 6 (March 1993), page 15.
- ↑ Gamers 2 p.34. ("Blaze, uma morena muito sensual, aclamada pelos gamemaníacos como uma das musas dos games.")
- ↑ Mega Fun 2/1994 p. 104. ("Blaze, das schärfste Videogamebabe nach Chun Li".)
- ↑ "Top 10 Toughest Females in Gaming". Gamezone.com. 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "Top 5: Las chicas duras de los videojuegos". MeriStation.com. 2015-03-18. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
- ↑ "My Favorite Feminist Female Protagonists". Techraptor.net. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ Retro Gamer 128, page 80.
- ↑ "Retro: Diez heroínas del videojuego clásico". Es.ign.com. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
- ↑ "Streets of Rage Micro Review: Ragin' Hard". Kotaku.com. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
- ↑ Rouner, Jef (2015-08-17). "10 GAMES THAT WERE CENSORED FOR SEX". Houston Press. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "Digital Press - Issue 18 (1994-04)(Santulli, Joe)(US)". Archive.org. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "【iPhoneおすすめアプリ】悪いヤツラをブチのめす爽快アクション『ベア・ナックルII 死闘への鎮魂歌』 - ファミ通App". Famitsu.com. 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
- ↑ "The sexiest sprites of all time". GamesRadar. 2015-08-21. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "Computer and Video Games Magazine Issue 119". Archive.org. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ "Virtual Spotlight: Final Fight 3". USgamer. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
- ↑ MEGA CONSOLE 3 p.83. ("Questo simpatico ragazzo è lo risposto del Master System o Wonder Woman.")
- ↑ Byford, Sam (2014-11-19). "Why modern music owes a big debt to Japanese video games". The Verge. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
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