Software:64th Street: A Detective Story
64th Street: A Detective Story | |
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Japanese arcade flyer | |
Developer(s) | C.P. Brain |
Publisher(s) | Jaleco |
Designer(s) | Tokuhiro Takemori and team |
Composer(s) | Kiyoshi Yokoyama |
Platform(s) | Arcade game |
Release |
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Genre(s) | Beat 'em up |
Mode(s) | Single-player, 2 player co-op |
Arcade system | Jaleco Mega System 1-C hardware |
64th Street: A Detective Story (64番街 A DETECTIVE STORY 64Bangai A Detective Story) is a beat 'em up arcade game released by Jaleco in 1991.
Plot
The story starts out in a typical Double Dragon/Final Fight style setting at 64th Street with two protagonists: Rick (Anderson), a calm and intelligent, 35-year-old professional private detective and manager of the detective agency; and Allen (Tombs), a 19-year-old, reformed delinquent trained by Rick, who is "short-tempered and violent when angry". At the start of the plot, an evil corporation known as the Legacy organization, kidnapped the daughter of a mid-aged rich man and left him a letter explaining why they kidnapped her.[1]
Late one night, before Rick and Allen was about to close their office, the mid-aged rich man rushed inside the office while being exhausted. He asked for help saving his daughter and gave the letter to Rick and Allen. The next day, Allen notices an advertisement in the classifieds with similar sentence structure to the letter left by the kidnappers. Allen couldn't understand it so easily, until Rick told him to look cautiously at both, the letter and the ad. They soon realised that the writing was actually a secret code, only understood by certain crime lords, so Rick and Allen struggled toward the main base of the Legacy organisation to find the truth and save the kidnapped daughter. The setting later takes on a steampunk feel as it goes along, coming to a head in a battle inside a blimp.
Gameplay
Players One and Two start with the two selectable protagonists, Rick and Allen. Each private detective uses different fighting styles, attempt to solve cases by beating up each criminal they encounter. Many special items can be found by throwing enemies into the background and breaking things, typical of this popular genre in the 1990s arcades. Along the way they are harangued by all manner of thugs and toughs, whose costumes range from 1980s hip-hop wear to stereotypical pirates. The bosses are tough by way of strange special attacks.
Legacy
64th Street spawned a series of beat 'em ups for the Nintendo Super Famicom titled Rushing Beat. The game's two protagonists later made a cameo appearance in another Jaleco game, Chimera Beast.
Further reading
- Review on SlideToPlay.com
- 64th Street: A Detective Story – Rare Arcade Brawler Rereleases on iPhone and iPad on About.com's ClassicGames section
External links
- Version on iTune by dotemu
- 64th Street: A Detective Story playable at the Internet Archive
- 64th Street: A Detective Story at the Killer List of Videogames
References
- ↑ Jareko ākaibuzu. Shiti konekushon, シティコネクション.. Tōkyō: Jitsugyōnonihonsha. 2016. ISBN 978-4-408-11203-9. OCLC 967584371. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/967584371.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/64th Street: A Detective Story.
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