Software:Battle City

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Battle City
Battle City NES cover.jpg
Famicom version cover art
Developer(s)Namco
Publisher(s)Namco
Producer(s)Takefumi Hyoudou
Programmer(s)Ryoichi Ohkubo
Composer(s)Junko Ozawa
SeriesTank Battalion
Platform(s)Family Computer, Game Boy, Arcade, X1, FM-7, MZ-1500
Release
  • JP: September 9, 1985
Genre(s)Multi-directional shooter
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Battle City[lower-alpha 1] is a multi-directional shooter video game for the Family Computer produced and published in 1985 by Namco. It is a successor to Namco's 1980 Tank Battalion, and would be succeeded itself by the 1991 Tank Force.[1]

An arcade version for the Nintendo VS. System would follow, and the game would eventually end up with the Virtual Console release for the Wii and Wii U. There was also a related Game Boy game of the same name dating back to 1991, which was developed and published by Nova Games.

Although the Famicom version was never officially released outside Japan, it was one of the most common inclusions in unofficial famiclone multicarts.[2]

Gameplay

The player controls a tank and shoot projectiles to destroy enemy tanks around the playfield. The enemy tanks enter from the top of the screen and attempt to destroy the player's base (represented on the screen as a phoenix symbol), as well as the player's tank itself. A level is completed when the player destroys 20 enemy tanks, but the game ends if the player's base is destroyed or the player loses all available lives. Note that the player can destroy the base as well, so the player can still lose even after all enemy tanks are destroyed.

Battle City contains 35 different stages that are 13 units wide by 13 units high. Each map contains different types of terrain and obstacles. Examples include brick walls that can be destroyed by having either the player's tank or an enemy tank shoot at them, steel walls that can be destroyed by the player if they have collected three stars, bushes that hide tanks under them, ice fields that make it difficult to control the tank and patches of water which cannot be crossed by tanks. The game becomes more challenging in later levels, as enemy tanks may act as decoys to lure players away from their base so that another tank can destroy it. In addition, flashing red tanks releases a random power-up when destroyed. There are several types of power-ups, such as a clock that stops all enemies, a protective shield, and a bomb that eliminates all on-screen enemies. The enemy tanks come in four different sizes, with the largest one requiring four shots to destroy.

Features

The original Famicom version of Battle City provides a co-op multiplayer mode and a built-in level editor, one of the earliest video games to do so.[2] Due to its simplicity, Battle City hosts an extensive ROM hacking scene.[2]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
Famitsu24/40[3]
PlayStation Magazine (JP)18.1/30[4]

Notes

  1. Japanese: バトルシティー Hepburn: Batoru Shitī

References

  1. Tank Force arcade game
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Murphy, Ed (2 September 2021). "Tank Battalion / Battle City". Hardcore Gaming 101. http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/tank-battalion-battle-city/. Retrieved 12 April 2023. 
  3. "バトルシティー (GB)" (in ja). Famitsu (Kadokawa Corporation). https://www.famitsu.com/cominy/?m=pc&a=page_h_title&title_id=13566. Retrieved September 28, 2020. 
  4. (in ja) 超絶 大技林 '98年春版: ゲームボーイ - バトルシティー (Special). 42. Tokuma Shoten Intermedia. 15 April 1998. p. 516. ASIN B00J16900U. 

External links