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{{Header Nav|game=Blazer|num=0}}
{{Header Nav|game=Blazer}}
{{Infobox
{{Game
|completion=3
|image=Blazer flyer.png
|title=Blazer
|title=Blazer
|image=Blazer flyer.png
|japanese=ブレイザー
|developer=[[Namco]]
|developer=[[Namco]]
|publisher=[[Namco]]
|publisher=[[Namco]]
|japanese=ブレイザー
|year=1987
|genre=Isometric [[shooter]]
|systems={{syslist|cade}}
|systems=[[Arcade]]
|genre=[[Shooter]]
|released={{rd|1987}}
|players=1-2
|players=1-2
|modes=[[Single player]], [[Multiplayer]]
}}
}}
{{game disambig||the unrelated [[Commodore 64]] game|[[Blazer (Commodore 64)]]}}
{{Wikipedia|Blazer (video game)}}
'''Blazer''' (ブレイザー, lit. ''Bureizā''), is an isometric [[shooter]] arcade game, that was released by [[Namco]] in [[1987]] only in Japan. It runs on Namco System 1 hardware, was the first 16-bit game to use a 3/4-view perspective, and was also the first game from Namco to feature a "legal notice" on startup saying that the game was for use in Japan only. With the exceptions of [[Beraboh Man]], [[Bakutotsu Kijūtei]] and [[Four Trax]], every Japan-exclusive game Namco has released since has featured a similar notice on startup - and even if some were later released in the US, it still appears on startup on the Japanese versions.


'''Blazer''' is a [[shooter]] arcade game that uses an isometric perspective. It was released by [[Namco]] in [[1987]] only in Japan. It runs on Namco System 1 hardware, and is the first 16-bit game to use such a perspective.
The player alternates between a tank named "Vanguard" and a helicopter named "Maiheriko" (and for the final mission, a boat named "Maiboto"), to kill enemies both on land and in the air. Some airbased enemies will leave behind powerups for Vanguard to collect, when hit by its anti-aircraft missiles; they can restore its fuel, increase its fuel capacity, make it invulnerable for a short period of time, and even grant it an extra life if it manages to collect enough of them (initially thirteen, but can go up to sixteen).


==Introduction==
<gallery>
In Blazer, the player must alternate between a tank and a helicopter (and for the final mission, a boat), to destroy enemies both on land and in the air.
File:Blazer title screen.png|Title screen.
File:Blazer startup screen.png|The game's legal notice.
File:Blazer high score table.png|Default high score table.
File:Blazer gameplay.png|First mission of game.
</gallery>


==Table of Contents==
{{ToC}}
{{:Blazer/Table of Contents}}
{{-}}


[[Category:Namco]]
[[Category:Namco]]
[[Category:Arcade]]
[[Category:1987]]
[[Category:Shooter]]
[[Category:Shooter]]
[[Category:Single player]]
[[Category:Multiplayer]]
[[Category:MAME]]
[[Category:MAME]]

Latest revision as of 00:14, 9 May 2022

Box artwork for Blazer.
Box artwork for Blazer.
Blazer
Developer(s)Namco
Publisher(s)Namco
Year released1987
System(s)Arcade
Japanese titleブレイザー
Genre(s)Shooter
Players1-2
ModesSingle player, Multiplayer
LinksBlazer ChannelSearchSearch
For the unrelated Commodore 64 game, see Blazer (Commodore 64).

Blazer (ブレイザー, lit. Bureizā), is an isometric shooter arcade game, that was released by Namco in 1987 only in Japan. It runs on Namco System 1 hardware, was the first 16-bit game to use a 3/4-view perspective, and was also the first game from Namco to feature a "legal notice" on startup saying that the game was for use in Japan only. With the exceptions of Beraboh Man, Bakutotsu Kijūtei and Four Trax, every Japan-exclusive game Namco has released since has featured a similar notice on startup - and even if some were later released in the US, it still appears on startup on the Japanese versions.

The player alternates between a tank named "Vanguard" and a helicopter named "Maiheriko" (and for the final mission, a boat named "Maiboto"), to kill enemies both on land and in the air. Some airbased enemies will leave behind powerups for Vanguard to collect, when hit by its anti-aircraft missiles; they can restore its fuel, increase its fuel capacity, make it invulnerable for a short period of time, and even grant it an extra life if it manages to collect enough of them (initially thirteen, but can go up to sixteen).

Table of Contents

edit