Software:Elemental Master

From HandWiki
Revision as of 07:31, 9 February 2024 by Sherlock (talk | contribs) (url)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Short description: 1990 video game
Elemental Master
Elemental Master 1990 Cover.jpg
Developer(s)Technosoft
Publisher(s)
  • JP: Technosoft
  • NA: Renovation Products
Composer(s)Toshiharu Yamanishi
Platform(s)Genesis
Release
  • JP: 14 December 1990
  • NA: March 1993
Genre(s)Scrolling shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Elemental Master is a top down scrolling shooter developed by TechnoSoft for the Sega Genesis and released in 1990 in Japan and in 1993 in North America by Renovation Products.[1]

Gameplay

The game is autoscrolling upwards. The player can choose to either shoot up or down. There are different weapons (types of magic) available, based on (naturally) the elements. Of the seven levels the game has, the player can choose the order of the first four.

Plot

Long ago in the fantasy kingdom of Lorelei, the followers of an evil being called Gyra were sealed underneath the city's castle. However, a seemingly heroic sorcerer known as Aryaag betrayed the king's trust and unleashed the power of Gyra on the kingdom with the intention of letting the evil influence spread. Laden, the strongest sorcerer in the kingdom, was ready to attack Aryaag, but was stopped in shock when Aryaag revealed himself to be Laden's brother Roki. Backed by Gyra's most dedicated followers, Roki banished Laden from the conquered kingdom, but Laden vows to stop Gyra's influence from spreading and to stop Gyra's ambitions.

Development

The soundtrack was composed by Toshiharu Yamanishi, who also worked on Thunder Force III, Thunder Force IV and Dragon's Fury (one song from Elemental Master was remixed into a new version in Dragon's Fury).[2] The style of the soundtrack is synthrock with classical vibes.

Reception

Illusionware gave it the grade A/92% and wrote that the game strikes the "perfect" balance between graphics, music and gameplay and an "excellent piece of gaming history".[3] Sega-16 writer Benjamin Galway gave the grade 9 out of 10.[4] MegaTech gave the game an overall score of 78/100, giving praise to the graphics, audio, and gameplay, but was critical to the game having only five levels and its easy difficulty.[5] Console XS gave the game an overall score of 81/100. They criticized the game for having too few levels and its easy difficulty, but called its gameplay as "addictive".[6]

References

External links