| Star Force | |
|---|---|
| Developer(s) | Tecmo |
| Publisher(s) | Tecmo |
| Japanese title | スターフォース |
| Release date(s) | |
| Genre(s) | Shooter |
| System(s) | Arcade, NES, MSX, Sharp X68000, Sega SG-1000, Mobile, Virtual Console |
| Players | 1-2 |
| Followed by | Super Star Force |
Star Force is a vertical shooter developed by Tecmo (known at the time as Tehkan). It was released in some arcades outside of Japan as Mega Force. The game consists of a single fighter ship flying through space, and occasionally over floating terrain while being attacked by enemy ships, and destroying land based targets. The only weapon is the ship's guns, but they can be enhanced through a single power up that attaches to the ship and grants the player rapid fire capability.
Received considerably better in Japan than it was in the U.S., Star Force is considered repetitive by many American players, while others applaud the game for its degree of challenge. It was converted to several popular Japanese systems such as the Famicom, MSX, Sega SG-1000, and the Sharp X68000 home computer, as well as a Mobile phone app. The only system to ever see an American release was the NES, where the game was actually improved over the original Japanese release. Star Force was remade in 1995, along with two other NES shooters with very little upgraded, for the Super Nintendo in the Japan only release of the Caravan Shooting Collection. It was also included in Hudson's compilation of Famicom shooters in 2006 in Hudson Best Collection Vol. 5.
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In the year 2010 of Dimension Almanac, there was a mysterious planet named GORDESS which was moving in the darkness of the cosmos for the purpose of mass murder and plunder. Everyone gave up fighting against GORDESS because of its awesome power. One day a brave soldier riding a space patroller challenged GORDESS to fight. People called this space patroller "FINAL STAR", wishing to be saved. You must bring an end to the murders which have been committed for the past 2,000 years.
The player must pilot a spaceship over series series of islands - drifting in outer-space - shooting enemy spacecraft and ground-based targets. Special symbols appear at regular intervals and can be shot or collected for bonuses. The levels are designated by letters of the Greek alphabet.
A single power-up, known as a purser, must first be shot before it can be collected. It first appears as a brown circle. Contact with this circle will destroy your ship. Once it is shot, the purser appears in the form of a smaller ship, which can be collected in order to grant your ship rapid fire power.
Each level has an end-of-level boss that must be defeated before the player can progress to the next level. The boss itself has no offensive abilities other than collision, however the platform that it launches from contains two cannons that fire a few shots at your ship before scrolling off the screen. Each level also has a mid-level boss that can be defeated before it forms entirely, granting the player a large point reward.
The Famicom, Sega SG-1000, and MSX conversions are close replications of the arcade game, but as expected, the 16-bit Sharp X68000 boasts a near perfect translation of the arcade game (the X68000 was particularly famous for the accuracy of its arcade translations.) The NES conversion of Star Force contained a few graphical and gameplay improvements over the Famicom version that improved the accuracy of the port. Star Force was also converted for play on mobile phones.