Software:Hyper Force

From HandWiki
Hyper Force
Hyper Force, Visual Impact, front.jpg
Cover art in all regions by Tony Ferguson
Developer(s)Visual Impact Productions
Publisher(s)Original release
  • NA/EU: Computer West
Relaunch
  • WW: Songbird Productions
Designer(s)David Govaert
Thomas Vidts
Programmer(s)Claude Verstraeten
Kris Van Lier
Artist(s)Kurt Huyghe
Tom Willemkens
Composer(s)Kurt Drubbel
Platform(s)Atari Jaguar
ReleaseOriginal release
Relaunch
  • WW: 10 April 2000
Genre(s)Action-adventure, platform
Mode(s)Single-player

Hyper Force is a side-scrolling action-adventure platform video game developed by Visual Impact Productions and published by Songbird Productions exclusively for the Atari Jaguar on April 10, 2000.[1]

The players take control of a lone soldier in the year 2099, where a megacorporation that has destroyed multiple planets plans to start a war against Earth if they are not stopped. Originally announced in 1994,[2] Hyper Force was showcased in E3 1995 but it was not released until 2000, a year after the system was declared as an open platform by Hasbro Interactive in 1999.[3][4][5]

Hyper Force received generally positive reviews from critics since its release, with praise towards the graphics, controls and gameplay, while the music, sound effects and technical shortcomings of the game were regarded as negative points.

Gameplay

Gameplay screenshot of the game. The status bar shows the score, player's health, number of lives, weapon energy and money earned.

Hyper Force is a 2D, side-scrolling, action-adventure platform game which takes places on the fictional planet Terran where the player controls a lone soldier from the Interstellar Special Forces across four areas, each having a set of six levels to travel through on a mission to destroy the megacorporation Trans Con, who plans to launch an attack against Earth.[6] Progress is manually kept by the cartridge's EEPROM by saving on either of the three slots available by pausing the game at any time and pressing Option on the controller and they are allowed to resume their last game by pressing Option at the title screen and choosing either saved slot to continue.[6] The game cartridge also keeps high-scores and settings made by the player as well.

Throughout the course of the game, the player fights against a variety of enemies and robots, who randomly drop power-ups, health, tech items that increase the score and money to pick up after being destroyed, with the later being used at the Interstellar Special Forces shop after finishing a level to buy new weapons and their respective upgrades, health recharge and lives, though items are also scattered in the level to pick up as well.[6] After finishing six levels, a story cutscene is shown to progress the story. In various levels there hidden locations that contains items and other important elements introduced later in the game. Introduced in the first level are ropes that the player can hang on and traverse through the level while also shoot enemies when hanging, but players can also hang off from them by pressing down or jump from them by pressing both the jump and the shoot buttons at the same time.

Also scattered through the level are obstacles such as spikes and traps, with more obstacles such as destructible blocks and colored barriers that obstruct the pathway of the player, with the later becoming more important when other colored barriers are introduced and these can be opened by finding their respective colored switch. When shooting at the enemies on the ground, players can also aim their shots by crouching or looking up. Players can also collide with enemies but they do not receive points by doing so and if they die, they are sent back to the start of the level but item pick ups are not respawned and the game is over once all lives are lost. Colliding with the metallic orbs scattered around the level that obstruct the path too many times will result in the activation of a 100-second destruction timer, which kills the player instantly if they do not quickly find the exit from the level.

Plot

In the year 2099 before the start of a new century, mankind has managed to expand into the stars through development of devices that allows interstellar travel possible and at a short time, with technological breakthroughs creating new levels of medical care and automation but megacorporations have unlimited desires to expand their operations in outer space, with Trans Con being the most ruthless by decimating multiple planets and harnessing resources to break the restrains of the Terran High Command. Not wanting to lose corporative support, politicians chose to ignore the situation, which became more delicated and as a result they turn to the Interstellar Special Forces to eradicate Trans Con and their empire, by destroying their multiple bases of operations and affiliated cops, guardians and soldiers without involvement of the population by sending a lone soldier from the special forces, who faces the possibility of being disowned by the government if he fails in completing the task.[6][7]

When the lone soldier destroys Trans Con's mining bases and crosses through Varmox City, he receives a message from ISF that the megacorporation has created a supersoldier after arriving at their rocket garden fortress and by the time he arrives at their secret laboratories, receives another message that Trans Con is preparing to start a clone war against Earth unless he stops their scientists in the area. Although the lone soldier succeeds in stopping the scientists on the laboratories, one of the supersoldiers named the Trans Con Warrior manages to escape. After destroying it, the soldier activates a self-destruct button that annihilates Trans Con alongside their empire with the lone soldier escaping from their homeworld, returning to Earth and he is honored for his work.

Development and release

Hyper Force was first previewed in 1994 on French magazine CD Consoles, featuring a different graphical artstyle from the final release.[2] Their preview article also mentioned Visual Impact working on a second project for the Jaguar, which was inspired by Doom.[2] It was primarily developed in Belgium.[2][8][9] Internal testing reports in regards to the game from Atari Corporation indicated that many elements of the game were criticized.[10] The game was showcased in a playable state at E3 1995, where it was slated to be published by Computer West, who published both Cannon Fodder and Pinball Fantasies for the Jaguar in 1995 respectively[3][11] but Hyper Force went unreleased due to the discontinuation of the Jaguar for not performing well both commercially and critically,[12][13] until Songbird Productions picked the rights and licensed the game from Visual Impact to release it, however, since the developer did not provided the source code of the game, it was released as it was received by the publisher.[14][15] The game was released almost a year after the system was declared as an open platform by Hasbro Interactive in 1999.[4][16]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame2.5/5 stars[17]
The Atari Times73%[18]
neXGam7 / 10[19]
Video Games2/5 stars[20]

Hyper Force received generally positive reviews since its release. Eric Mylonas of GameFan gave a positive outlook to the game and compared it with Contra, praising the graphics and difficulty while criticizing the color choices in the game and limited sprite animations, remarking that "What here is good but a little more animation would have been nice".[14]

David Sherwin of The Atari Times gave positive remarks to the gameplay, controls and graphics but criticized the music, sound effects, the process of saving the game and bugs in regards to restoring the game. He summarized by saying "Hyper Force doesn't bring very many new things to modern console gaming and, with its somewhat dated side-scrolling blaster action and limited graphic environments, is definitely showing its age. That being said, Hyper Force is a polished and professional effort that will provide hours of entertainment for most Jaguar gamers".[18]

References

  1. Smith, Jason. "Atari Jaguar Timeline". jaguarsector.com. http://www.jaguarsector.com/index.php?autocom=ibwiki&cmd=article&do=print_article&id=379. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Actualités France - Hyper Force - Atari". CD Consoles (Pressimage) (1): 14. November 1994. http://download.abandonware.org/magazines/CD%20Consoles/cdconsoles_numero01/Page%20014.jpg. Retrieved June 20, 2018. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Hans Reutter (July 11, 2020). Atari Jaguar @ E3 1995 - Atari Explorer Online (1h 20min 52sec). YouTube. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Henry, Dana (May 14, 1999). "Hasbro Interactive Releases Rights to the Atari Jaguar Hardware Platform". Atari Explorer. http://www.atari-explorer.com:80/Hasbro-PR.htm. Retrieved 11 June 2018. 
  5. Hawken, Kieren (July 2013). "Minority Report Special: Jaguar - Hyper Force". Retro Gamer (Imagine Publishing) (118): 45. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Hyper Force game manual (Atari Jaguar, US)
  7. "New Jaguar Game Review - Hyperforce". Atari Entertainment (The Hide-Out): 17. 2001. https://archive.org/stream/AtariEntertainment2001/page/n18/mode/1up. 
  8. "Dossier - Ils Arrivent Sur Jaguar - Hyper Force / Jaguar". CD Consoles (Pressimage) (5): 76. March 1995. http://download.abandonware.org/magazines/CD%20Consoles/cdconsoles_numero05/Page%20076.jpg. Retrieved September 22, 2018. 
  9. "Europe: the state of play". Edge (20): 62–67. May 1995. https://archive.org/stream/Edge_UK_020#page/n61/mode/2up. 
  10. "Atari Jaguar - Hyper Force". http://www.atarimania.com/game-atari-jaguar-hyper-force_30121.html. Retrieved 30 June 2018. 
  11. "Feature - XT Generation Report - Atari Jaguar". MAN!AC (Cybermedia) (20): 40. June 1995. https://archive.org/stream/MANIAC.N020.1995.06/MANIAC.N020.1995.06-DURiAN_Searchable#page/n39/mode/1up. 
  12. "Atari and JT Storage Reorganisation Plan". http://contracts.onecle.com/atari/jt.mer.1996.04.08.shtml. Retrieved 2018-08-04. 
  13. "ATARI CORP Annual Report (Regulation S-K, item 405) (10-K405) ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS". http://google.brand.edgar-online.com/displayfilinginfo.aspx?FilingID=261582-33477-51099&type=sect. 
  14. 14.0 14.1 C. Mylonas, Eric (October 2000). "The Graveyard - Hyper Force". GameFan 8 (10): 104–105. https://archive.org/stream/Gamefan_Vol_8_Issue_10#page/n107/mode/2up. Retrieved June 23, 2018. 
  15. Loguidice, Bill (June 9, 2006). "Songbird Productions: An Interview with Carl Forhan". http://www.armchairarcade.com/neo/node/371. Retrieved 22 June 2018. 
  16. Toyama, Kevin (May 2001). "Nouveau Classic Gaming - Old System, New Games". Next Generation (Imagine Media) (77): 68–73. https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File:NextGeneration_US_77.pdf&page=72. 
  17. Games, Rovi. "Hyper Force - Overview". http://www.allgame.com/game.php?id=34904. 
  18. 18.0 18.1 Sherwin, David (March 28, 2005). "Hyper Force - This one has hyperactive drive". http://www.ataritimes.com/index.php?ArticleIDX=459. Retrieved 23 June 2018. 
  19. Heiko (June 27, 2013). "Hyper Force Im Test" (in de). https://www.nexgam.de/jaguar-atari/hyper-force-atari-jaguar.html. Retrieved 23 June 2018. 
  20. Karels, Ralph (September 2000). "Jaguar-Special - Die Raubkatze Lebt! - Hyper Force". Video Games (Future-Verlag) (106): 92–93. https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File:VideoGames_DE_2000-09.pdf&page=93. Retrieved June 20, 2018. 

External links