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{{nihongo|'''''The Guardian Legend'''''|ガーディック外伝|Gādikku Gaiden|'''''Guardic Gaiden'''''}} is a hybrid Adventure/RPG/Shoot 'em up [[video game]] developed by [[Compile (software company)|Compile]] for the [[Nintendo Entertainment System|Nintendo Entertainment System (NES)]]. It is the sequel to the {{vgy|1986}} [[MSX]] game ''[[Guardic]]''. It was published and released in [[Japan]] by [[Irem (company)|Irem]] in {{vgy|1988}}, in [[North America]] by [[Brøderbund]] in {{vgy|1989}}, and in [[Europe]] by [[Nintendo]] in {{vgy|1990}}.<ref name="GameFAQsTGL">{{cite web |url = http://www.gamefaqs.com/console/nes/data/587320.html |title = ''The Guardian Legend'' Information |accessdate = 2008-06-18 |publisher = [[GameFAQs]]}}</ref>
{{nihongo|'''''The Guardian Legend'''''|ガーディック外伝|Gādikku Gaiden|'''''Guardic Gaiden'''''}} is a hybrid Adventure-RPG/Shoot 'em up [[video game]] developed by [[Compile (software company)|Compile]] for the [[Nintendo Entertainment System|Nintendo Entertainment System (NES)]]. It is the sequel to the {{vgy|1986}} [[MSX]] game ''[[Guardic]]''. It was published and released in [[Japan]] by [[Irem (company)|Irem]] in {{vgy|1988}}, in [[North America]] by [[Brøderbund]] in {{vgy|1989}}, and in [[Europe]] by [[Nintendo]] in {{vgy|1990}}.<ref name="GameFAQsTGL">{{cite web |url = http://www.gamefaqs.com/console/nes/data/587320.html |title = ''The Guardian Legend'' Information |accessdate = 2008-06-18 |publisher = [[GameFAQs]]}}</ref>


The game follows a lone protagonist, The Guardian, in her quest to stop an [[Extraterrestrial life|alien]]-infested [[space station]] before it reaches the planet [[Earth]].<ref>Instruction Manual, p. 3.</ref> The Guardian must destroy the space station by activating ten safety devices scattered throughout the station and then engaging its self–destruct sequence.<ref name="Manual6">Instruction Manual, p. 6.</ref> The player, assuming the role of The Guardian, is able to explore the station in a [[Nonlinear gameplay|non–linear]] fashion to find these safety devices and thus save Earth. Different weapons can be acquired during the course of the game to combat the hostile aliens who inhabit the space station.<ref name="Manual6" />
The game follows a lone protagonist, The Guardian, in her quest to stop an [[Extraterrestrial life|alien]]-infested [[space station]] before it reaches the planet [[Earth]].<ref>Instruction Manual, p. 3.</ref> The Guardian must destroy the space station by activating ten safety devices scattered throughout the station and then engaging its self–destruct sequence.<ref name="Manual6">Instruction Manual, p. 6.</ref> The player, assuming the role of The Guardian, is able to explore the station in a [[Nonlinear gameplay|non–linear]] fashion to find these safety devices and thus save Earth. Different weapons can be acquired during the course of the game to combat the hostile aliens who inhabit the space station.<ref name="Manual6" />

Revision as of 01:29, 28 August 2008

The Guardian Legend
North American boxart
Developer(s)Compile
Designer(s)Masamitsu "Moo" Niitani (Director)
Jemini Hirono (Program and Effect)
Pochi Nakamori (Map Maker)
Janus Teramoto (Graphics)
Masatomo "Miyamo" Miyamoto,
Takeshi "Shant" Santo (Music)
Wao Isee (Password)
Platform(s)Nintendo Entertainment System
Genre(s)Adventure-RPG/Scrolling shooter
Mode(s)Single player

The Guardian Legend (ガーディック外伝, Gādikku Gaiden, Guardic Gaiden) is a hybrid Adventure-RPG/Shoot 'em up video game developed by Compile for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). It is the sequel to the Template:Vgy MSX game Guardic. It was published and released in Japan by Irem in Template:Vgy, in North America by Brøderbund in Template:Vgy, and in Europe by Nintendo in Template:Vgy.[1]

The game follows a lone protagonist, The Guardian, in her quest to stop an alien-infested space station before it reaches the planet Earth.[2] The Guardian must destroy the space station by activating ten safety devices scattered throughout the station and then engaging its self–destruct sequence.[3] The player, assuming the role of The Guardian, is able to explore the station in a non–linear fashion to find these safety devices and thus save Earth. Different weapons can be acquired during the course of the game to combat the hostile aliens who inhabit the space station.[3]

The Guardian Legend received mixed reviews from magazines such as Electronic Gaming Monthly and Nintendo Power.[4][5] While it has been praised for its impressive graphics, memorable sound, and responsive controls, it has been criticized for its repetitive gameplay and complicated password system. Though the game received little fanfare upon its initial release, it has since been renowned as a classic example of a multiple-genre game,[6] setting a standard for other games with multiple gameplay elements such as Xexyz, ActRaiser, and Sigma Star Saga to follow. The game also features an experience system, a core mechanic in role-playing games, which upon reaching a required point value gives the character an increase along the health bar. It is also one of the few games on the NES to feature a female as the protagonist.[7]

Gameplay

The player in the Labyrinth, shooting through enemies and yellow barriers to reach the warp panel (blue barrier).

In The Guardian Legend, the player takes control of the female guardian of Earth, a "highly sophisticated aerobot transformer."[note 1] The player's mission is to infiltrate Naju, a planet-like space station which aliens sent hurtling towards the Earth. While inside, the player must activate ten safety devices linked to Naju's self-destruct mechanism to initialize it and destroy Naju before the station reaches Earth. However, Naju is infested with hostile alien lifeforms which the player must fight through in order to successfully activate the switches and escape.[9] The story is further advanced through a series of messages left by one or more unidentified predecessor(s) who unsuccessfully attempted to engage the self-destruct mechanism of Naju before The Guardian arrived. [10] The first message was left by the sole remaining survivor of the attack on Naju[11] and serves as an introduction; later messages give hints aiding the player in opening locked corridors.[7]

Gameplay varies depending on the player's location within Naju. The player controls The Guardian in humanoid form when exploring the surface of Naju (the Labyrinth) and in spaceship form when investigating Naju's interior (the Dungeon).[12] In each case, the player has a life meter which is depleted by enemy attacks and can be replenished by picking up one of several items. When the life meter is exhausted, The Guardian explodes, and the game ends.[13] The player can use two types of weapons; these include the primary rapid-fire weapon with unlimited ammunition and various powerful secondary weapons that consume "power chips" with each use.[3] Power chips are also used as currency to purchase upgrades for the guardian in a handful of shops scattered throughout Naju. These upgrades, which can also be found within the Labyrinth or obtained after defeat of a boss, include primary weapon improvements, new or upgraded secondary weapons, and round, brightly colored creatures called Landers.[note 2] Blue and Red Landers, which are recurring characters in many Compile games, increase the player's maximum life and power chip capacities, respectively.[14]

Blue Landers in particular have multiple roles in The Guardian Legend. Some Blue Landers are not items but rather non-player characters that dispense advice to the player or offer to exchange upgrades for power chips. Others can provide a password that allows the player to resume the game later with progress retained. The game has one of the longest password systems found on the NES at 32 characters long, and each password utilizes upper- and lower-case letters as well as numbers. These Blue Landers also serve as checkpoints; players can restart their game in these designated rooms after being defeated as long as the system is not turned off.[13]

Adventure (The Labyrinth)

The Labyrinth is the adventure-rpg game portion of The Guardian Legend, in which the player, in humanoid form, explores the surface of Naju in a top-down perspective.[12] The player must search the Labyrinth to find and infiltrate the corridors and ultimately activate Naju's ten safety devices.

The player battles the boss creature Optomon in the Dungeon.

The Labyrinth consists of screen-wide passages and rooms[15] individually plotted as X-Y coordinates. A map detailing these coordinates in the form of a grid can be viewed on the pause subscreen.[16] While the player can generally walk from one screen to the next, some screens are separated by portals called "warp panels".[17] Warp panels bear a symbol indicative of their surrounding area, and the player can only access these warp panels if in possession of a key with the matching symbol. Some warp panels lead to rooms containing various clues and story elements while others are gateways to shops, password rooms, and corridors. Keys allow players to access different portions of the Labyrinth, which they can then explore in a non–linear fashion.[13]

Shoot 'Em Up (The Dungeon)

The Dungeon encompasses the shoot 'em up portion of The Guardian Legend, in which the player, now in spaceship form, battles through Naju's interior. The Dungeon consists of a series of enemy-filled corridors which are found during exploration of the Labyrinth.[18] The player's objective in the Dungeon is to progress through each corridor and defeat the boss at the end. Upon completion, the player effectively destroys the corridor and is returned to the Labyrinth, where a power-up (and sometimes a warp panel key) can be collected as a reward. [13] While some corridors can be accessed freely, others can only be entered by performing a particular action in the corridor room. Some rooms in the Labyrinth contain clues indicating how to unseal these corridors. Ten of the corridors in the game serve as safety devices which must be activated before engaging the self-destruct sequence and escaping Naju.[3]

Development

The Guardian Legend was developed for the Nintendo Famicom by Compile as the sequel to the Template:Vgy MSX game Guardic and released as Guardic Gaiden in Japan by Irem in Template:Vgy.[1] The director was Masamitsu "Moo" Niitani, the creator of Zanac and the Puyo Puyo series. The development team also featured many of the same people who helped create the original Guardic as well as Zanac.[1] The box art on the cover of Guardic Gaiden was created by Japanese science-fiction illustrator Naoyuki Kato and depicts the guardian as a female cyborg.[19] The Guardian Legend was ported to the NES and released in North America by Brøderbund in April Template:Vgy.[1] Prior to its release, it was exhibited at the Template:Vgy Winter Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada, where it was one of the prime attractions at the Brøderbund booth along with the U-Force controller.[20] The game was later published in Europe by Nintendo in Template:Vgy.[1]

Reception

File:Guardian Legend Japanese Box Cover.jpg
Japanese box cover, designed by manga artist Naoyuki Kato.

The Guardian Legend has received both praise and criticism for its innovative multiple-genre format. Shortly after the release of the game in 1989, an Electronic Gaming Monthly reviewer called the game a Blaster Master clone and "only average at best," and a second reviewer explained that the "repetitive" action-adventure gameplay detracted from the game.[4] However, a third reviewer wrote that the action-adventure gameplay served to "elevate [the game] to a much higher level" than other shoot em' ups and also praised the game for successfully bringing together two distinct themes.[4] Lucas Thomas of The Evansville [Indiana] Courier & Press favorably compared the Game Boy Advance title Sigma Star Saga to The Guardian Legend, emphasizing their successful fusion of the action–adventure and shoot 'em up genres.[6] In March Template:Vgy, editors of Game Informer referred to the game as "the ultimate genre bender," likening it to a combination of the NES games The Legend of Zelda, Metroid, and 1942. While they acclaimed the game for its "exciting and challenging" shooter stages, they also criticized it for its complex world map and "outrageous" password system.[21]

The Guardian Legend also received accolades from the editors of Nintendo Power. The game made a notable appearance in September Template:Vgy as the #9 ranked game on the magazine's Top 30 NES Chart. The editors praised the game, describing the protagonist as "the ultimate transforming hero."[5] The game would remain on the chart for nearly a year.[22] The magazine's editors and staff, in recognition of its achievements, nominated the game for several awards in its first-ever Nintendo Power Awards for 1989, including "Best Graphics & Sound", "Best Play Control," and "Best Overall,"[23] but the game did not win the top award in any of these categories.[24] In addition, Nintendo Power published a partial walkthrough for the game in the following November 1989 issue.[25]

The graphics and sound of The Guardian Legend have also been influential. Robert Dewar and Matthew Smosna of the open computing magazine Open Systems Today cited the game as an example of how graphics co-processors such as those in the NES can compensate for inadequate CPU speed in graphics-intensive computer applications.[26] They also noted that, regardless of CPU speed, the fast-paced action seen in the game could not be replicated on a personal computer at that time (1992) without an expensive graphics board.[26] The music of the game has remained particularly popular many years after the game's release. Samantha Amjadali of the Melbourne–based newspaper The Herald Sun reported in 2002 that a remixed tune from the game was the second most popular track on the website OverClocked ReMix for the month of March.[27] In addition, video game cover band The Advantage's 2006 album Elf Titled features a cover version of music from one of the game's dungeon levels.[28]

Notes

  1. ^ Although her name is never stated in The Guardian Legend, she is given a name (ミリア Miria)[citation needed] and described as a "System D.P." cyborg[8] in Guardic Gaiden.
  2. ^ The original Japanese name for these creatures can also be approximated as Lander (ランダー, Randā.)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "The Guardian Legend Information". GameFAQs. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
  2. ^ Instruction Manual, p. 3.
  3. ^ a b c d Instruction Manual, p. 6.
  4. ^ a b c d Harris, Steve; Semrad, Ed; Nauert, Donn; Allee, Jim (September 1989), "Electronic Gaming Review Crew", Electronic Gaming Monthly, vol. 5, p. 11{{citation}}: CS1 maint: year (link)
  5. ^ a b "Nintendo Power Top 30", Nintendo Power, vol. 8, pp. 82–84, September–October 1989{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: year (link)
  6. ^ a b Thomas, Lucas M. (2005-08-18), "'Sigma Star' Combines RPG, Shoot-Em'-Up Action", The Evansville Courier, pp. D11. {{citation}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  7. ^ a b de Gruyl, Devin (2008-06-20). "Retro–Active: The Guardian Legend". Way of the Geek. Retrieved 2008-07-17.
  8. ^ Tokuma, p. 2. "なすすべもない地球に、ある日女性戦士「システムD.P.」が送りこまれてきた。 [Eventually, with no other recourse, Female Warrior(s) [System D.P.] was dispatched by Earth.]"
  9. ^ Instruction Manual, pp. 3, 6.
  10. ^ Compile (April Template:Vgy). The Guardian Legend (Nintendo Entertainment System) (NES-GD-USA ed.). Brøderbund. Dialog box: I am going to try to activate the self-destruct device. If I fail, I would like you to do this task so this cannot happen to any other race. [...] I hope this message will not be read by anyone...it will mean that I have failed. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. ^ Compile (April Template:Vgy). The Guardian Legend (Nintendo Entertainment System) (NES-GD-USA ed.). Brøderbund. Dialog box: This star "NAJU" was our home, but we were invaded by evil life-forms. Everyone except me was killed. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. ^ a b Instruction Manual, p. 10.
  13. ^ a b c d Instruction Manual, p. 7.
  14. ^ Instruction Manual, pp. 6, 10-13.
  15. ^ Instruction Manual, p. 4.
  16. ^ Instruction Manual, p. 9.
  17. ^ Compile (April Template:Vgy). The Guardian Legend (Nintendo Entertainment System) (NES-GD-USA ed.). Brøderbund. Dialog box: All the rooms leading to the corridors are locked, so use the "warp panel" to get into the room. To use the "warp panel", blast through the cover. You will also need the key for the panel. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  18. ^ Instruction Manual, pp. 7, 10.
  19. ^ Kato, Naoyuki (2007). SF画家 加藤直之 時空間画抄. Tokyo: Laputa Co., Ltd. p. 88. ISBN 978-4-947752-57-4.
  20. ^ "Nester's C.E.S. Report", Nintendo Power, vol. 5, pp. 15–18, March–April 1989{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: year (link)
  21. ^ a b "Classic GI", Game Informer, vol. 179, p. 114, March 2008{{citation}}: CS1 maint: year (link)
  22. ^ "Nintendo Power Top 30", Nintendo Power, vol. 16, pp. 22–24, September–October 1990{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: year (link)
  23. ^ "Nintendo Power Awards '89", Nintendo Power, vol. 11, pp. 96–99, March–April 1990{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: year (link)
  24. ^ "Nintendo Power Awards '89", Nintendo Power, vol. 12, pp. 26–29, May–June 1990{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: year (link)
  25. ^ "The Guardian Legend", Nintendo Power, vol. 9, pp. 69–71, November–December 1989{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: year (link)
  26. ^ a b Dewar, Robert B. K. (1992-11-16). "Clearing The Fog Surrounding x86 -- Sorting Out The Many Variations Of x86 And The Many Vendors That Sell It". Open Systems Today. 64 (111). Manhasset, New York: CMP Publications, Inc. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  27. ^ Amjadali, Samantha (2002-03-31), "Computer Game Composers", Sunday Herald Sun (Melbourne, Australia), p. 80. {{citation}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  28. ^ Theakston, Rob. "Elf Titled - Overview". All Music Guide. All Media Guide. Retrieved 2008-06-30.
  • The Guardian Legend instruction manual. USA: Brøderbund. 1988. NES-GD-USA.
  • Guardic Gaiden Guide Technique Book (ガーディック外伝完全攻略テクニックブック, Gādikku Gaiden Kanzen kōrya ku Tekunikku Bukku) (in Japanese). Tokyo: Tokuma Communications. 1988-02-29. p. 56. ISBN 4886580769.