The Amazing Spider-Man (handheld video game)

For the video game also released in 1990, see The Amazing Spider-Man (1990 video game).
For the video game also released on handhelds, see The Amazing Spider-Man (2012 video game).
The Amazing Spider-Man

European cover art
Developer(s) Rare
Publisher(s)
Distributor(s)
Composer(s) David Wise[1]
Series Spider-Man
Platform(s) Game Boy
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Beat 'em up-style action (side-scrolling)
Mode(s) Single-player

The Amazing Spider-Man is the title of a video game released for the original Nintendo Game Boy. It was published in 1990 by LJN (a subsidiary of Acclaim Entertainment), and developed by Rare Ltd. It is a platform side scrolling action game.

It was followed by two sequels, The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and The Amazing Spider-Man 3: Invasion of the Spider-Slayers.

Storyline

Spider-Man's most dangerous super villains have discovered his secret identity, Peter Parker, and kidnapped his wife, Mary Jane. The action game takes the player through various city locations, battling an assortment of minor thugs, animals, and a supervillain at the end of each level who, through intermission scenes, will taunt Spider-Man as to the whereabouts of his wife.[2]

Characters

Spider-Man - main character - Peter Parker, bitten by a radioactive spider, now fights crime as the Amazing Spider-Man. He begins the game through a phone call with Mysterio, who tells him that his wife, Mary Jane, has been kidnapped. Spider-Man travels through the city, fighting criminals and arch-villains in an attempt to get Mary Jane back.
Mary Jane Watson-Parker - Also known as M.J., Mary Jane is the wife of Peter Parker. She has been kidnapped by Spider-Man's worst enemies.

Bosses

  • Mysterio - first boss - This former special effects wizard appears to know Spider-Man's true identity, and uses that knowledge to trap him. Mysterio is the first boss and is found at the end of an alleyway. He uses his smoke effects to try to confuse Spider-Man.
  • The Hobgoblin - second boss - He awaits Spider-Man at the top of a building. He drops pumpkin bombs on Spider-Man while flying through the air on his goblin glider.
In the instruction manual, the Green Goblin was originally pictured as the end boss for this level. However, he was replaced because, at the time of release, the villain was presumed dead in the comics.
  • Scorpion - third boss - He taunts Spider-Man into entering the subway, where he uses his prehensile tail to try to impale Spider-Man.
  • Rhino - fourth boss - Through Central Park and at the dead end in an alleyway, the Rhino uses his massive weight to try to run Spider-Man through. He is of sub-par intelligence.
In the game, this boss is actually listed as Neanderthal, not Rhino. Yet, to anyone who reads the comics, the witty taunts that take place during the game's intermission scenes replicate those normally given by the Rhino. In fact, the term "neanderthal" may be intended as an insult, rather than a name.
  • Doctor Octopus - fifth boss - A brilliant doctor before an accident fused mechanical arms to his body, Doctor Otto Octavius uses his new appendages to try to stop Spider-Man at the end of the rooftop of the second building.
  • Venom - sixth and final boss - The true abductor of Mary Jane, Eddie Brock has had it out for Peter Parker even before he bonded with an alien symbiote. He has powers similar to Spider-Man, using webbing to his advantage during their sewer battle.

Gameplay

Spider-Man has three extra lives and three continues. However, there are no passwords or secret codes. The intermission scenes between each level feature Spider-Man trading catchy barbs with a supervillain on a cell phone or a walkie-talkie to find out where he should go next.

A typical left-to-right panning interlude between levels. Spider-Man is on the left and Scorpion on the right.

Abilities

Items

Meters and counters

Levels

One of the wallcrawling sections.

Reception

The Amazing Spider-Man received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics. Many praised the graphics, sound effects, responsive controls, a pretty good storyline, and reasonable level of difficulty. However, some criticized the game for its restricted controls, especially the Angry Video Game Nerd. It holds a 3.1/5 rating on MobyGames.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.