Contra: Hard Corps

Contra: Hard Corps

North American cover art
Developer(s) Konami
Publisher(s) Konami
Director(s) Nobuya Nakazato
Producer(s) Tomikazu Kirita
Artist(s) Yasuomi Umetsu
Writer(s) Nobuya Nakazato
Composer(s) Hiroshi Kobayashi
Michiru Yamane
Akira Yamaoka
Hirofumi Taniguchi
Aki Hata
Series Contra
Platform(s) Mega Drive/Genesis
Release date(s)
  • NA August 8, 1994
  • JP September 15, 1994
  • PAL October 14, 1994
Genre(s) Run and gun
Mode(s) Single-player
Cooperative multiplayer (up to two players)

Contra: Hard Corps is a side-scrolling run and gun-style shoot-'em-up video game released by Konami for the Sega Genesis in North America and South Korea in 1994. It was also released for the Mega Drive as Contra: The Hard Corps (魂斗羅 ザ・ハードコア Kontora Za Hādo Koa)[1] in Japan and as Probotector in Europe and Australia . It was the first game in the Contra series released for a Sega platform and serves as a departure from preceding games in the series in many ways.

Set five years after the events of Contra III: The Alien Wars, a terrorist group led by the renegade Colonel Bahamut have stolen an alien cell recovered from the war and now intends to use it to produce weapons. Instead of the traditional Contra heroes of Bill Rizer and Lance Bean, a new task force known as the Hard Corps (with four members) are sent to deal with the situation. The game features a branching storyline with multiple possible endings.[2]

Gameplay

Ray and Sheena confront the "Maximum Jumbo", a giant robot sub-boss in Stage 1

As usual, the objective of the game to reach the end of each stage, shoot at every enemy that gets in the way, and fight the boss awaiting at the end. While most of the game have the character walking on foot, certain stages have the player riding a Motoroid, a hoverbike that can transform into an ostrich-like robot. Unlike previous Contra games, which featured overhead segments in addition to the regular side-view stages, all the stages in Hard Corps retains the standard side-view perspective for most of the game. Another difference is the player can now choose between one of four unique player characters.[3] Like in previous Contra games, up to two players can play simultaneously, but they're not allowed to choose the same character.[3]

The controls are similar to Contra III, but have been adapted to work with the Genesis's standard three-button controller, as well as the six-button controller. The three main buttons (A, B, and C) are used for switching between weapons, shooting, and jumping respectively in the default control configuration. By pressing the weapon change button while shooting (or the X, Y, or Z buttons on the six-button controller), the player can toggle between two shooting styles: one which allows for free movement while shooting, and another which keeps the character still while he or she aims in one of eight directions.[4] The player can also jump down from certain platforms, as well as move on walls and ceilings like in Contra III. A new ability added to the game is a sliding technique performed by holding the direction-pad diagonally downwards while pressing the jump button. The character will be invulnerable while sliding and can even harm certain enemies.[5]

The player can now carry up to four different weapons, as well as a supply of bombs. Like in previous games, weapons are obtained from flying capsule pods. This time the weapon items are now labeled "A", "B", "C", and "D", which will vary depending on the character controlled by the player. Each player begins with a standard machine gun, which can be upgraded to a different semi-automatic weapon by picking up the A-type power-up. When the player loses a life, their current weapon will be lost. Unlike Contra III, the player's supply of bombs will remain the same when a life is lost.[6]

Another unique feature to Contra: Hard Corps is the addition of branching paths that allows the player to play through a different set of stages depending on key decisions made during key moments of the game's story.[7]

Plot

In 2641, an elite team of commandos called the "Unified Military Special Mobile Task Force K-X", also known as the "Contra Hard Corps", has been assembled to combat the rapid spread of crime and illegal activities following the war. When an unknown hacker infiltrates the city's security system and reprograms a group of unmanned robots to cause havoc, the Hard Corps are deployed to handle the situation.[8][9]

Characters

Ray Poward
A standard male soldier.[10]
Sheena Etranzi
A female soldier.[11]
Brad Fang
A wolf-like humanoid with two cybernetic arms, one of them equipped with a gatling gun.[12]
Browny
A small robot. When controlling Browny, the player can also hover in the air by pressing the jump again during mid-air.[13]

Stages

The game begins when the Hard Corps are deployed on a big city to destroy a group of unmanned weapons that had been reprogrammed to attack civilians. At the end of the first stage, the player confronts a robot piloted by the mercenary Deadeye Joe, who escapes after the battle. At this point, the Hard Corps will receive an emergency call from Dr. Geo Mandrake informing them that the government's research center is being attacked by an unknown group. The player can choose to pursue Deadeye Joe or go to the research center to thwart the terrorists, each path leading to a different second stage. Regardless of the chosen path, both stages converge to a common route. In the third stage, the player are sent to a junkyard to apprehend the notorious hacker Noiman Cascade, while the fourth stage is set in the jungle, where the enemy's hideout is located. In the fifth stage, the Hard Corps will be caught in trap by the enemy leader, Colonel Bahamut, and the player is given another choice. From this point on, the storyline splits into four possible paths, each with its own outcome. There's also a hidden coliseum stage with its own ending, for a total of five possible outcomes.[2]

Development

The score was written by Hiroshi Kobayashi, Michiru Yamane, Akira Yamaoka, Hirofumi Taniguchi, and Aki Hata. The tune "Simon 1994 RD" is a remix of "Vampire Killer", a recurring theme music in the Castlevania series. The track is played in the secret Battle Stadium stage against the first enemy, an afro-haired cyborg who fights the player with a whip, as well as fishes thrown like a boomerang. His design is a pastiche of Castlevania protagonist Simon Belmont, as well as of Japanese singer Masato Shimon.

Versions

The Japanese version, titled Contra: The Hard Corps, was made significantly easier than its North American counterpart due to the addition of a life gauge that allows the player to take three hits from an enemy before losing a life. The Japanese version also features unlimited continues, in contrast with the American version, which only allows the player to continue five times. The Japanese cover features an illustration drawn by animator Yasuomi Umetsu, who also provided some of the character art in the game's manual.

The PAL version of the game is titled Probotector and like the European localizations of previous Contra games for home consoles, the main characters (CX-1 through 4) and some of the enemies were renamed and replaced with robotic counterparts (Browny was left unchanged, with only his name changed). The plot was also rewritten, with Colonel Bahamut and Dead-Eye Joe being redesigned as humanoid aliens, and the alien cell was replaced with a computer device called the "X-Drive". The gameplay is the same as the North American version, but the player only has four continues in the European version, instead of five like in the North American release.

Some cutscenes were also altered. For example, the player character no longer identifies the boss of Stage 1, a robot previously thought unmanned, to be piloted by a man, or Dr. Geo Mandrake being eaten by a monster created in his merger machine. It is also impossible to side with the Alien General in this version, thus eliminating one of the endings.[14]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
EGM7.75/10[15]
Mega88%[16]

GamePro gave the game a positive review, praising the impressive bosses, "eye-catching" graphics, explosions "which test the limits of TV speakers", simple control configuration, and intense action.[17] The four reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly also gave the game a recommendation for its four character selection, intense action, and impressive graphical effects, though they remarked that the difficulty can be extremely frustrating.[15]

References

  1. Konami. Contra: The Hard Corps (in Japanese). Mega Drive. Level/area: Copyrights screen.
  2. 1 2 "Contra: The Hard Corps developer's commentary". Beep! Mega Drive (in Japanese). October 1994.
  3. 1 2 Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 6.
  4. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 10.
  5. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 11.
  6. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 13.
  7. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Stage 5: Jungle, Mission Briefing.
  8. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 4.
  9. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 5.
  10. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 14.
  11. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 15.
  12. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 16.
  13. Konami. Contra: Hard Corps. Sega Genesis. Level/area: Instruction manual, page 17.
  14. http://www.schnittberichte.com/schnittbericht.php?ID=3891
  15. 1 2 "Review Crew: Contra Hard Corps". Electronic Gaming Monthly (Ziff Davis) (63): 34. October 1994.
  16. Mega review, issue 26, page 43, November 1994
  17. "ProReview: Contra: Hard Corps". GamePro (64) (IDG). November 1994. pp. 76–77.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.