Software:Axelay

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Axelay
Axelay SNES box art.jpg
Developer(s)Konami
Publisher(s)Konami
Producer(s)Kazumi Kitaue
Designer(s)Noritoshi Kodama
Programmer(s)Hideo Ueda
Artist(s)Kazuhiro Namba
Composer(s)Taro Kudo
Platform(s)Super Nintendo Entertainment System
Release
  • JP: 11 September 1992
  • NA: September 1992
  • EU: 30 September 1993
Genre(s)Scrolling shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Axelay[lower-alpha 1] is a 1992 scrolling shooter video game developed and published by Konami for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. Set in the fictional solar system Illis where an alien empire known as "Armada of Annihilation" invades its planets including the Earth-like Corliss (Mother), players take control of the titular D117B space fighter craft as a last resort to stop the alien invasion by recovering its lost weaponry. The gameplay mainly consist of both vertical-scrolling and horizonal-scrolling stages in the same vein as Konami's own Life Force, with players choosing three different weapon-types that increase in number as they progress through the game.

Headed by Super Castlevania IV producer Kazumi Kitaue, Axelay was developed by most of the same team that would later go on to form Treasure, the creators of Gunstar Heroes. Though first launched for the Super NES, the game has since been re-released through download services for Nintendo consoles. The title became popular and regarded by publications as a classic of the shoot 'em up genre, garnering praise for its visuals, music and an advanced selection of weapons available at the time. A sequel, Axelay 2, was planned but never materialized due to low sales of the first game.

Gameplay

Top: Vertical gameplay
Bottom: Horizontal gameplay

Axelay is a scrolling shooter similar to Konami's own Life Force where players take control of the D117B space fighter craft as a last resort to stop the Armada of Annihilation by recovering its lost weaponry through six stages, each with a boss at the end that must be fought before progressing any further. The gameplay varies quite a bit from that of traditional 2D scrolling shooters.[1][2][3] Rather than collecting weapon power-up items from defeated enemies in order to obtain more advanced weapons, players earns new weapons as they advance in the game instead.[1][2][3] There are three weapon types with which the fighter is outfitted at the start of a stage: a standard weapon, a special weapon and a bomb or missile.[1][3] Players may freely switch between each of these weapon types during a level.[1][3] At the end of each level, a new choice of one of these types of weapons is added to the ship's armory and players are given the ability to modify their fighter to suit the needs of the next level.[1][3] Examples of weapons include multiple-way shot, vulkan cannon, and spread bombs.[2] Similar to Life Force, levels transition between vertical and horizontal scrolling layouts, forcing the player to select weapons that will be most effective for each level.

Each selectable weapon in Axelay also operate like shields.[2] The game eschews the standard one-hit-kill model prevalent in space shooters, instead simply disabling the currently selected weapon and reducing the player to a weak default version of that weapon type. Sustaining a second hit while using a weakened weapon will destroy the player's ship. However, directly colliding into an enemy will still destroy the ship instantly. The title uses various visual effects in both the top-down and side-scrolling stages. In the top-down stages, enemies and objects are warped as they come into view to produce a pseudo-3D effect, in addition of parallax scrolling effects.[2][3]

Axelay uses a respawn system where their ship immediately starts at the location they died at. Getting hit by enemy fire or colliding against solid stage obstacles will result in losing a life and once all lives are lost, the game is over though players have the option to continue playing via a limited number of credits.[1] Although there is an ending, the game loops back to the first stage after completing the last stage, with each one increasing the difficulty and enemies fire denser bullet patterns.

Plot

The plot of Axelay varies between regions.[1] The game takes place in the fictional planetary system known as Illis. Once a peaceful system, it was invaded by an alien empire known as the Armada of Annihilation, taking over the planets of the Illis system including the Earth-like Corliss (Mother in the Japanese version). As a last resort against the alien forces, the D117B fighter is sent out to recover its lost weaponry and put a stop to the invasion. Having traversed the cloud covered Cumuluses, the space colony Tralieb, the largely populated Urbanite, the watery Cavern, and Sector 3 Lava Planet, the Axelay D117B fighter makes its way to the fortress of Armada of Annihilation and completes its mission.[1]

Development and release

Axelay was designed by a group of Konami employees that would later go on to found Treasure, the creators of Gunstar Heroes.[4][5] Kazumi "Mr." Kitaue served as producer with Hideo "Dreamer" Ueda, S. Tamate and Kazuhiko "König" Ishida serving as programmers.[5] Tsunenari "Boncharu" Yada and "Furiten" Nagisa Tsuchiya acted as designers with Toshiharu Furukawa and M. "Kagenin Sasaki" Suzuki gave additional support during development, while artist Kazuhiro "PD." Namba created the pixel art.[5] Former Konami Kukeiha Club composer Taro Kudo scored the soundtrack, however the music for the second stage boss ("Cosmic Dance!") was remixed by Masanori "M.C." Adachi and the ending music was composed by Akira "AKI" Souji, though Souji is not credited as such in the game.[5][6][7] Other people also collaborated in its development.[5] Ueda stated that one of the enemies in the last stage previously appeared in other shoot 'em up games by Konami such as Life Force and Flak Attack, as his then-president at Konami liked the enemy's attack.[8]

Axelay was first released in Japan by Konami on 11 September 1992.[9][10][11] The game was originally intended to be a Japanese exclusive but was given an international release in response to numerous letters from consumers and critics.[12] Later in that month it was released in North America and the following year in Europe.[13][14] The North American cover art was illustrated by Tom Dubois.[15] The soundtrack was released on a single 22-song disc published by King Records on 21 October 1992, while the tracks "Unkai" and "Colony" were included on the Konami All Stars 1993 and the Perfect Selection Konami Shooting Battle II compilation discs respectively.[6][7][16][17] The title was re-released on the Wii's Virtual Console service in Australia and North America in 2007 and later in Japan in 2008.[18][19] It has since been re-released for the Wii U's eShop service across all regions in 2015.[20]

Reception

Contemporary reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankings81.14%[21]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame4.5/5 stars[22]
Consoles +96%[24]
EGM35/40[25]
Famitsu23/40[9]
GamesMaster80%[26]
Jeuxvideo.com17/20[28]
Joypad96%[29]
94%[30]
Mega Fun82%[32]
Nintendo Power3.75/5[33]
Total!81%[37]
Video Games (DE)80%[38]
Bad Influence!93%[39]
Famimaga22.79/30[40]
Megablast80%[41]
N-Force93%[42]
91%[42]
Play Time90%[43]
Power Play86%[44]
Super Pro91%[45]
Total! (DE)
Awards
PublicationAward
Super Play (1996)#36 Top 100 SNES Games[46]
Electronic Gaming Monthly (1997)#91 Top 100 Best Games of All Time[47]
ScrewAttack (2007)#6 Top 10 2-D Shooters[48]
Nintendo Power (2008)#18 Top 20 SNES Games[49]

Axelay's visual effects combined with what was then seen as an advanced selection of weapons available, as well as the music score, made it into a popular shooter for the SNES console.[50]

GamePro praised the game's inventive weapons, range of challenge for players of differing abilities, and the fact that the player starts the game already with three fully charged weapons. They gave it a 4.5 out of 5 for control and fun factor and a perfect 5.0 for graphics and sound.[51] Nintendo Power scored Axelay 3.75 out of 5, praising its graphics but noting that its head-on perspective takes some getting used to.[33] Super Play gave the game an 85%.[36]

Axelay is considered by some publications as a classic of its genre. Super Play listed it number 36 on its list of the top 100 SNES games of all time in 1996.[46] The following year, it was listed as number 91 on Electronic Gaming Monthly's 100 best games of all time in their 100th issue, which cited its Mode 7 effects, the boss visuals, and the strategy involved in choosing the weapons loadout before each level.[47] The website ScrewAttack called it the #6 best 2D shooter.[48] Nintendo Power magazine later called it the #18 best game on the SNES.[49] Axelay was included as one of the titles in the 2010 book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die.[52] In 1995, Total! ranked Axelay 88th on their "Top 100 SNES Games."[53] IGN rated Axelay 55th in its Top 100 SNES Games. They praised the game calling it "A visual stunner on the SNES" and felt that the unique application of the Mode 7 made Axelay feel like two games in one.[54]

Retrospective reviews

Retrospective assessments
Review scores
PublicationScore
GameSpot(Wii) 7.5 / 10[55]
IGN(Wii) 7.5 / 10[18]
Nintendo Life(Wii) 8/10 stars[19]
USgamer(Wii U) 4 / 5[20]

Retrospective reviewers praised the game as well.[56] Both IGN and GameSpot gave the Virtual Console re-release of Axelay a 7.5 out of 10.[18][55] Nintendo Life gave the game a score of 80 out of 100.[19]

Legacy

After finishing Axelay two times consecutively on the highest difficulty level, a message promising Axelay 2 appeared but the planned sequel never materialized due to low sales of the first game.[2][47] The Axelay D117B fighter makes an appearance in Konami's Airforce Delta Strike as an unlockable aircraft.[57]

Notes

  1. Japanese: アクスレイ Hepburn: Akusurei

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Axelay instruction booklet (Super Nintendo Entertainment System, US)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Hoffman, Chris (August 2001). "GRkives - Games In Retrospect: Axelay". Gamers' Republic (Millennium Publishing) (36): 92. https://archive.org/stream/Gamers_Republic_Issue_36#page/n93/mode/1up. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Kalata, Kurt (11 September 2017). "Axelay". Hardcore Gaming 101. http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/axelay/. 
  4. Kuboki, Kei (October 1993). "An Interview With: Treausre". Micom BASIC Magazine (DieHard Gamers Club) 1 (11): 60. https://archive.org/stream/Gamefan_Vol_1_Issue_11#page/n59/mode/1up. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Vo, Alex (7 February 2007). "SF Kosmo: Quantity Over Quality - Axelay". GameSpy. IGN Entertainment. http://sfkosmo.classicgaming.gamespy.com/treasure/related/axelay/axelay.html. 
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  8. Salamander Deluxe Pack Plus bonus files (Sega Saturn, JP) (Translation by Shmuplations. ).
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  24. Hermelin, François; Kan, Kaneda (September 1992). "Super Famicom Review - Axelay". Consoles + (M.E.R.7) (12): 86–88. https://www.abandonware-magazines.org/affiche_mag.php?mag=51&num=8679&album=oui. Retrieved 24 January 2020. 
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External links