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'''''SD Snatcher''''' is a [[Role-playing video game]] by [[Konami]] for the [[MSX#MSX2|MSX2]] computer platform in {{vgy|1990}} exclusively in [[Japan]]. It is a [[Spin-off (media)|spinoff]] of the original ''[[Snatcher]]'', adapting the same storyline into a different genre. In contrast to the original game's realistic art style, ''SD Snatcher'' features a "[[super deformed]]" art style, depicting all of the game's characters with big heads and child-like proportions (only the game's ending deviates from this style and reverts back to the original game's realistic style). Like the MSX2 port of the original ''Snatcher'', ''SD Snatcher'' was released on a proprietary [[Konami Sound Cartridge|cartridge]] with all of the game's music and sound recorded on a custom-made sound chip, along with three [[floppy disk]]s containing the actual game data.
'''''SD Snatcher''''' is a [[role-playing video game]] by [[Konami]] for the [[MSX#MSX2|MSX2]] computer platform in {{vgy|1990}} exclusively in [[Japan]]. It is a [[Spin-off (media)|spinoff]] of the original ''[[Snatcher]]'', adapting the same storyline into a different genre. In contrast to the original game's realistic art style, ''SD Snatcher'' features a "[[super deformed]]" art style, depicting all of the game's characters with big heads and child-like proportions (only the game's ending deviates from this style and reverts back to the original game's realistic style). Like the MSX2 port of the original ''Snatcher'', ''SD Snatcher'' was released on a proprietary [[Konami Sound Cartridge|cartridge]] with all of the game's music and sound recorded on a custom-made sound chip, along with three [[floppy disk]]s containing the actual game data.


==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==

Revision as of 14:04, 30 March 2011

SD Snatcher
Developer(s)Konami
Publisher(s)Konami
Designer(s)Producer: Yutaka Haruki
Planner: Yoshihiko Ohta, Hideo Kojima
Composer(s)Masahiro Ikariko
Mutsuhiko Izumi
Michiru Yamane
Motoaki Furukawa
Yuji Takenouchi
Harumi Ueko
Yuko Kurahashi
Tomoya Tomita
Tsuyoshi Sekito
Kazuhiko Uehara
Platform(s)MSX2
ReleaseApril 27, 1990 (JP)
Genre(s)Role-playing video game
Mode(s)Single-player

SD Snatcher is a role-playing video game by Konami for the MSX2 computer platform in Template:Vgy exclusively in Japan. It is a spinoff of the original Snatcher, adapting the same storyline into a different genre. In contrast to the original game's realistic art style, SD Snatcher features a "super deformed" art style, depicting all of the game's characters with big heads and child-like proportions (only the game's ending deviates from this style and reverts back to the original game's realistic style). Like the MSX2 port of the original Snatcher, SD Snatcher was released on a proprietary cartridge with all of the game's music and sound recorded on a custom-made sound chip, along with three floppy disks containing the actual game data.

Gameplay

As with most RPGs released at the time, the game consists of overhead exploration of areas and menu-driven turn-based battles. However, it abandoned random encounters and introduced an innovative battle system, which uses a first-person perspective that allows the player to aim at specific body parts of an enemy and disable certain characteristics. For example, shooting a robot's wheel will render the robot immobile, making it less likely to avoid the player's gunfire, or shooting its legs will reduce its agility, attacking its weapon will reduce its strength, or continuously attacking its weak point could lead to a potentially quicker victory. As with other RPGs, the player can upgrade their weapon and purchase auxiliary items that can be used in battle to help the player out. The game also introduced an auto-battle feature, where Metal Gear can take control of the battle. Each of the firearm weapons have different abilities and target ranges as well as limited ammunition that needs to be brought or found separately. Such a battle system has rarely been used since,[1] though similar battle systems based on targetting individual body parts can later be found in Square's Vagrant Story (2000), Bethesda's Fallout 3 (2008), and Nippon Ichi's Last Rebellion (2010).[2]

Plot

SD Snatcher follows the same storyline as the original Snatcher. Like in the original game, story is set in the year 2042, where the player takes control of Gillian Seed, an agent of the JUNKER organization assigned to investigate a breed of cyborgs known as Snatchers, who prey on humans by killing them and taking their place in society. There are several story differences between SD Snatcher and the other versions of Snatcher due to the change in the game's genre. SD Snatcher is notable for featuring an alternate version of the originally planned ending that was cut from the PC88 and MSX2 versions of Snatcher before their release. This planned ending would later be included in the subsequent CD-ROM versions of the original Snatcher, beginning with the 1992 PC Engine remake.[3]

References

  1. ^ Kurt Kalata, Snatcher, Hardcore Gaming 101
  2. ^ European date fixed for the action / RPG Last Rebellion (Translation), Jeuxvideo.com
  3. ^ Konami. Snatcher CD-ROMantic (PC Engine) (in Japanese). Level/area: Playing manual, page 2.