Sword of the Berserk: Guts' Rage

Sword of the Berserk: Guts' Rage

North American Dreamcast cover art
Developer(s) Yuke's
Publisher(s) Eidos Interactive
Writer(s) Kentarō Miura
Composer(s) Susumu Hirasawa
Platform(s) Dreamcast
Release date(s)
  • JP December 16, 1999 (1999-12-16)
  • NA February 29, 2000 (2000-02-29)
  • EU May 19, 2000 (2000-05-19)
Genre(s) Action game
Hack and slash
Mode(s) Single-player

Sword of the Berserk: Guts' Rage, released in Japan as Berserk Millennium Falcon Arc: Chapter of the Flowers of Oblivion (ベルセルク 千年帝国の鷹篇 喪失花の章 Beruseruku Sennnen Teikoku No Taka Hen Wasurebana no Shō), is a hack and slash action video game for the Dreamcast based on the popular Berserk manga by Kentarō Miura. The game is set between volume 22 and 23 of the manga; right after Guts and Puck depart for Elfhelm with Casca, but before Farnese, Serpico, and Isidro catch up with them. The music is composed by Susumu Hirasawa, who also composed the anime series' music.

Released around the same time as Shenmue, Sword of the Berserk is notable for its early use of quick time events (QTE). It used these to determine the different non-linear paths the player would take, depending on whether they succeed or fail in pressing the displayed button quickly enough during a QTE, allowing different ways to complete the game.[1]

Plot summary

After saving a traveling performer named Rita from bandits while on their way to Elfhelm, Guts, Casca, and Puck come to a small castle town to rest. Upon arriving, they learn of a disease that transforms its victims into "Mandragorans", making them go berserk, killing people, even their loved ones, without thinking. As the story progresses, the ruler of the castle, Balzac, shows Guts a room in the castle where people infected with the disease are kept. Balzac says he's searching for a supposed cure. Guts learns from Balzac that the disease comes from an unusual plant, the Mandragora that grew into a tree located in a nearby village on the borders of his domain. After meeting a group of rebels that abducted Casca and learning the man became a tyrant to their people, Guts decides to carry out Balzac's request for the Great Tree's heart since the duke told him that it might provide a cure for Casca's madness. But while Guts is joined by Rita and a group of rebels, Balzac's men raid the rebels' hideout and capture Casca.

Losing their traveling companions while Guts confronts the Mandragorans' matriarch Erica, who maintained her free will to protect the Mandragora that grew from the remains of a boy named Niko, he and Rita find Balzac's men slaughtering the Mandragorans. Erica, upon seeing the utopia she created destroyed, chooses to destroy herself and the Mandragora Heart rather than hand the latter over with only the pendant she made from Niko's charm remaining as Rita picked it up. Guts was about to fight Balzac's men when Nosferatu Zodd arrives, the Apostle having freed Casca from her dungeon cell earlier, and they have a brief rematch that once more ends in a draw. By that time, encountering a young woman with a similar madness that the former believes to be Balzac's daughter, Puck and Casca stumble into the chamber where the fragment of the Madragora Heart that Balzac managed to get his hands on awakens. This causes all Mandragorans to act up and run amok in the town as Guts and Rita return.

Fighting his way through the Mandragorans and Balzac's forces to reach the castle, Guts and Rita see the mysterious girl and take her with them. When they finally reach Balzac's throne room, Guts demands to know where Casca is, but Balzac only answers that they are too late to save her. Rita asks Balzac how all of these events came to pass; he recounts that he was once a kind and just ruler, but the pressure of juggling his responsibilities as both a ruler and as a husband eventually got to him, and he now finds comfort only in bloodshed. Balzac also reveals the woman to be his wife, Annette. He had preserved her life with a drug extract made from the Mandragora's Heart, making her ageless, but at a steep price - the drug also ravaged her mind, rendering her unable to remember her own husband. Despite this, in his madness, Balzac drinks an even more potent extract of the Mandragora's Heart, transforming himself into a monstrous figure. Guts quickly dispatches him, however, and saves Casca from the fully grown Mandragora. In a cruel twist of fate, Casca's exposure to the Mandragora briefly restores her sanity - but only briefly, as to Guts' dismay, she soon reverts to her usual catatonic state. He is given little time to mourn this turn of events, however, as in the confusion of battle, Rita had dropped Erica's pendant - revealed to be a Behelit - and the dying Balzac had claimed it, offering Annette's life as his sacrifice in order to be reborn as an Apostle. Guts finds himself forced into battle once more, but manages to defeat the Apostle Balzac despite his new-found powers. With the town reverting to some normalcy, Guts and his group continue their journey; Rita promises to remember them forevermore. In the epilogue, the scene cuts back to Balzac's castle. There, the Skull Knight recovers Balzac's Behelit and proceeds to swallow it, as he has many before it.

Cast

English

Japanese

Soundtrack

Berserk
Millennium Falcon Arc:
Chapter of the Flowers of Oblivion
Original Game Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Susumu Hirasawa
Released December 15, 1999 (1999-12-15)
Genre
Length 42:30
Label Hakusensha, Marine ENTERTAINMENT MMCC-7008
Producer Susumu Hirasawa, Kentaro Miura
Susumu Hirasawa soundtrack chronology
Lost Legend
(1999)
Berserk
Millennium Falcon Arc:
Chapter of the Flowers of Oblivion
Original Game Soundtrack

(1999)
densha
(1999)

Berserk Millennium Falcon Arc: Chapter of the Flowers of Oblivion Original Game Soundtrack (ベルセルク 千年帝国の鷹篇 喪失花の章 Original Game Soundtrack Beruseruku Sennnen Teikoku No Taka Hen Wasurebana no Shō Orijinaru Gēmu Saundotorakku)[2] marked the return of Susumu Hirasawa, composer and performer of the soundtrack of the Sword-Wind Chronicle anime. Unlike the anime's soundtrack, Hirasawa composed and performed the game's opening theme, "FORCES II", and ending theme, "INDRA" (coincidentally, Hirasawa started his career as a musician with a band called Mandrake, and they made a song called "Mandragora"). "ZODDO II" uses a similar horn arrangement to "Immortal Man" from Virtual Rabbit and is a different version of Fear/Monster from the Berserk anime; "Sister's Story" uses a line of Thai kathoey chanting of "Kun Mae #2" from Kun Mae on a Calculation played backwards for the intro. Hirasawa would later compose and perform the opening and ending themes of Chapter of the Holy Demon War and the theme song of the Golden Age Arc film trilogy. The first-pressing limited edition of the soundtrack included the 2000 Berserk calendar and collector stickers.

All songs written and composed by Susumu Hirasawa, except tracks 4, 6, 7, 8 and 10 by Masaya Imoto and Hiromi Murakami. 

No. Title Length
1. "FORCES II"   3:55
2. "Nico" (ニコ) 3:43
3. "Tenacity of Blood" (血の執着 Chi no Shūchaku) 3:29
4. "Introduction" (イントロダクション Intorodakushon) 4:07
5. "Sister's Story" (シスターの語り Shisutā no Katari) 3:30
6. "To the Castle" (城へ Shiro e) 2:25
7. "Balzac" (バルザック Baruzakku) 3:22
8. "Annette's Theme" (アネットのテーマ Anetto no Tēma) 1:12
9. "ZODDO II"   3:14
10. "Parasite" (パラサイト Parasaito) 3:05
11. "Great Tree" (大樹 Taiju) 3:39
12. "Apostle" (使徒 Shito) 2:07
13. "INDRA"   4:42

Besides the tracks included on the soundtrack, there are compositions present in the game that have never been released officially. They have been ripped from the game's GD-ROM and released on the internet.

  1. Menu
  2. Castle Engulfed in Chaos I
  3. The City at Night
  4. Resistance Hideout
  5. Flow of Blood
  6. Danger I
  7. Under the Church
  8. Castle Engulfed in Chaos II
  9. Giant Tentacle Corridor
  10. The Burning City
  11. Fight I
  12. Puck
  13. City
  14. In the Laboratory
  15. Shadow of Moonlit Night
  16. Balzac Death
  17. Evil Intent
  18. Mandragora Possession
  19. Attack I
  20. Sorrow

  1. A Few Thoughts I
  2. A Few Thoughts II
  3. Pain
  4. Torture
  5. Unknown
  6. Balzac Palace
  7. Danger II
  8. Epilogue
  9. Smell of Death
  10. Decay I
  11. Decay II
  12. Berserk I
  13. Berserk II
  14. Fight II
  15. Attack II
  16. Meeting
  17. Puck's Game
  18. Job Battle
  19. Disciple

Reception

On release, Famitsu magazine scored the game a 30 out of 40.[3]

References

  1. Patrick Klepek (4/10/2000). "Sword of the Berserk: Guts' Rage". Gaming Age. Retrieved 2011-03-27. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. Official store listing for Music for Movies
  3. ドリームキャスト - ベルセルク 千年王国の鷹篇 喪失花の章. Weekly Famitsu. No.915 Pt.2. Pg.50. 30 June 2006.

External links

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