Space Harrier: Difference between revisions

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201 bytes added ,  17 April 2022
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{{Header Nav|game=Space Harrier|num=4}}
{{Header Nav|game=Space Harrier}}
{{Game
{{Game
|completion=4
|title=Space Harrier
|title=Space Harrier
|image=Space Harrier arcade flyer.png
|image=Space Harrier arcade flyer.png
|japanese=スペースハリアー
|developer=[[Sega-AM2]], [[Sega-AM4]], [[Dempa]], [[Elite Systems]], [[Rutubo games]]
|developer=[[Sega-AM2]], [[Sega-AM4]], [[Dempa]], [[Elite Systems]], [[Rutubo games]]
|publisher={{co|Sega}}{{co|Dempa|jp}}{{co|Micomsoft|jp}}{{co|Takara|jp}}{{co|NEC|na|JP too}}{{co|Elite Systems|eu}}
|publisher={{co|Sega}}{{co|Dempa|jp}}{{co|Micomsoft|jp}}{{co|Takara|jp}}{{co|NEC|na|JP too}}{{co|Elite Systems|eu}}
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}}
}}
|genre=[[Rail shooter]], [[Third-person shooter]]
|genre=[[Rail shooter]], [[Third-person shooter]]
|systems=[[Arcade]], [[Amiga]], [[Amstrad CPC]], [[Atari ST]], [[Commodore 64]], [[Game Boy Advance]], [[Game Gear]], [[Family Computer]], [[NEC PC-6001]], [[NEC PC-8801]], [[PlayStation 2]], [[Sega 32X]], [[Sega Mark III]], [[Master System]], [[Sega Saturn]], [[TurboGrafx-16]], [[Wii]], [[Nintendo 3DS]], [[ZX Spectrum]]
|systems=[[Arcade]], [[Amiga]], [[Amstrad CPC]], [[Atari ST]], [[Commodore 64]], [[Game Boy Advance]], [[Game Gear]], [[Family Computer]], [[NEC PC-6001]], [[NEC PC-8801]], [[PlayStation 2]], [[Sega 32X]], [[Sega Mark III]], [[Master System]], [[Sega Saturn]], [[TurboGrafx-16]], [[Wii]], [[ZX Spectrum]]
|modes=[[Single player]]
|modes=[[Single player]]
|ratings=
|ratings=
|series=Space Harrier
|series=Space Harrier
|followed by=[[Space Harrier 3-D]]
|followed by=[[Space Harrier 3-D]]
|title1=3D Space Harrier
|japanese1=3D スペースハリアー
|developer1=[[M2]]
|publisher1=[[Sega]]
|year1=2012
|systems1={{syslist|3ds}}
|ratings1={{CERO|A}}{{ESRB|E10}}{{PEGI|7}}{{USK|6}}
|pcgamingwiki=Space Harrier
|pcgamingwiki=Space Harrier
}}
}}
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Space Harrier is set in the "Fantasy Zone", a surreal world composed of bright colors and a checkerboard-styled ground. The enemies are also unique, featuring prehistoric animals, Chinese dragons, and alien pods. The player is forced along the levels, running or flying around enemy fire, while shooting back with fireballs via the character's under-arm cannon (which doubles as a rocket-esque device allowing the character to fly).  It has a total of eighteen stages, each lasting less than two minutes in length and containing a boss at the end. Two levels therein—the fifth and the twelfth—are bonus stages, while the eighteenth level is a boss rush containing six of the game's bosses encountered up to that point.  The 1986 [[Sega Master System]] port of the game included an exclusive final boss, a powerful twin-bodied fire dragon named Haya Oh (named after then-Sega president Hayao Nakayama), and contained an original storyline and ending that were not in the arcade version.
Space Harrier is set in the "Fantasy Zone", a surreal world composed of bright colors and a checkerboard-styled ground. The enemies are also unique, featuring prehistoric animals, Chinese dragons, and alien pods. The player is forced along the levels, running or flying around enemy fire, while shooting back with fireballs via the character's under-arm cannon (which doubles as a rocket-esque device allowing the character to fly).  It has a total of eighteen stages, each lasting less than two minutes in length and containing a boss at the end. Two levels therein—the fifth and the twelfth—are bonus stages, while the eighteenth level is a boss rush containing six of the game's bosses encountered up to that point.  The 1986 [[Sega Master System]] port of the game included an exclusive final boss, a powerful twin-bodied fire dragon named Haya Oh (named after then-Sega president Hayao Nakayama), and contained an original storyline and ending that were not in the arcade version.
{{Continue Nav}}


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