Mega Man: The Power Battle
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Mega Man: The Power Battle | |
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Developer(s) | Capcom |
Publisher(s) | Capcom |
Designer(s) | Koji Ohkohara |
Composer(s) | Setsuo Yamamoto Hideki Okugawa |
Series | Mega Man |
Platform(s) | Arcade, PlayStation 2, GameCube, Xbox |
Release | Arcade GameTap |
Genre(s) | Fighting |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Arcade system | CP System II |
Mega Man: The Power Battle[a] is an arcade video game and a spin-off title for the Mega Man series. It was released in Japan in 1995 and was followed by a sequel, Mega Man 2: The Power Fighters, the following year. Both games—which were the first and only arcade titles ever to exist within the Mega Man franchise—were ported to home consoles in North America in 2004 as part of the Mega Man Anniversary Collection for PlayStation 2, Nintendo GameCube and Xbox and in Japan during the same year as part of two game compilation titled Rockman Power Battle Fighters (ロックマン パワーバトルファイターズ), also for the PlayStation 2.[3][4][5] An adaptation of both games for the Neo Geo Pocket Color, titled Rockman Battle & Fighters (ロックマン バトル&ファイターズ), was also made.[6]
Plot
The story of the game is simplistic; the evil Doctor Wily has rebuilt some of his Robot Masters, with which he is trying to take over the world, forcing the heroes to stop him.
Gameplay
The game allows the player to choose between three playable characters: Mega Man, Proto Man, and Bass. Two players can play the game simultaneously as different characters and team up to defeat the bosses.
The game plays similarly to the main Mega Man games - the player uses one button to jump, and one to fire the character's arm-mounted energy weapon. Holding the fire button charges the weapon in order to release a stronger blast. Holding down while pressing the jump button makes the character perform a dash, the appearance of which varies between characters.
After selecting a character, the player chooses between three "stories", with each one having different Robot Masters from various games. The "stories" are Mega Man 1-2, 3-6, and Mega Man 7. Upon choosing a "story", the game quickly pans through the various levels, letting the player choose one roulette-style.
A level is largely different from the mainstream Mega Man games; instead of going through an entire stage and fighting the Robot Master as a boss at the end, the player faces the Robot Master immediately, in a fight reminiscent of Capcom's Street Fighter series. Defeating a Robot Master earns the player their weapon, which can be switched to by pressing a button. Like in most Mega Man games, each Robot Master is weak to another one's weapon, so the player can fight through them in a "rock-paper-scissors"-style.
Music
Rockman: The Power Battle Arcade Gametrack | ||||
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Soundtrack album by Alph-Lyla | ||||
Released | December 1, 1995 | |||
Genre | Video game soundtrack | |||
Length | 55:00 | |||
Language | Japanese | |||
Label | Sony Records | |||
Mega Man Arcade soundtrack chronology | ||||
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The Rockman: The Power Battle (ロックマン ザ・パワーバトル) sound track was released on December 1, 1995 in Japan Sony Records. Its soundtrack contains arranged pieces from previous Mega Man games by Setsuo Yamamoto and Hideki Okugawa, and performed by Alph-Lyla.
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | ""Title" (タイトル, Taitoru)" | |
2. | ""Player Select" (プレイヤー・セレクト, Pureiyā serekuto)" | |
3. | ""Stage Select (Rockman 1-2)" (ステージ・セレクト(ロックマン1~2), Sutēji serekuto (Rokkuman 1~2))" | |
4. | ""Stage Starting" (ステージ・スターティング, Sutēji sutātingu)" | |
5. | ""Stage 1 (from Napalm Man's Theme)" (ステージ1(ナパームマンのテーマより), Sutēji 1 (Napāmuman no tēma yori))" | |
6. | ""Stage 2 (from Crash Man's Theme)" (ステージ2(クラッシュマンのテーマより), Sutēji 2 (Kurasshuman no tēma yori))" | |
7. | ""Stage 3 (from Guts Man's Theme)" (ステージ3(ガッツマンのテーマより), Sutēji 3 (Gattsuman no tēma yori))" | |
8. | ""Stage Select (Rockman 3-6)" (ステージ・セレクト(ロックマン3~6), Sutēji serekuto (Rokkuman 3-6))" | |
9. | ""Stage 4 (from Gyro Man's Theme)" (ステージ4(ジャイロマンのテーマより), Sutēji 4 (Jairoman no tēma yori))" | |
10. | ""Stage 5 (from Gemini Man's Theme)" (ステージ5(ジェミニマンのテーマより), Sutēji 5 (Jeminiman no tēma yori))" | |
11. | ""Stage 6 (from Shadow Man's Theme)" (ステージ6(シャドウマンのテーマより), Sutēji 6 (Shadōman no tēma yori))" | |
12. | ""Stage Clear" (ステージ・クリア, Sutēji kuria)" | |
13. | ""You Got New Weapon" (ユー・ゴット・ニュー・ウェポン, Yū gotto nyū wepon)" | |
14. | ""Stage Select (Rockman 7)" (ステージ・セレクト(ロックマン7), Sutēji serekuto (Rokkuman 7))" | |
15. | ""Stage 7 (from Rockman 7)" (ステージ7(ロックマン7より), Sutēji 7 (Rokkuman 7 yori))" | |
16. | ""Stage 8 (from Cloud Man's Theme)" (ステージ8(クラウドマンのテーマより), Sutēji 8 (Kuraudoman no tēma yori))" | |
17. | ""Stage 9 (from Slash Man's Theme)" (ステージ9(スラッシュマンのテーマより), Sutēji 9 (Surasshuman no tēma yori))" | |
18. | ""Stage 10 (from Freeze Man's Theme)" (ステージ10(フリーズマンのテーマより), Sutēji 10 (Furīzuman no tēma yori))" | |
19. | ""Stage 11 (from Junk Man's Theme)" (ステージ11(ジャンクマンのテーマより), Sutēji 11 (Jankuman no tēma yori))" | |
20. | ""Stage 12 (from Shade Man's Theme)" (ステージ12(シェードマンのテーマより), Sutēji 12 (Shēdoman no tēma yori))" | |
21. | ""Stage 13 (from 'MAKAI')" (ステージ13(フロム“MAKAI”), Sutēji 13 (furomu "MAKAI"))" | |
22. | ""Vs. Wily" (VSワイリー, VS Wairī)" | |
23. | ""Stage: Wily Boss" (ステージ・ワイリー・ボス, Sutēji Wairī bosu)" | |
24. | ""Stage: Wily Machine" (ステージ・ワイリー・マシーン, Sutēji Wairī Mashīn)" | |
25. | ""Stage: Wily Capsule" (ステージ・ワイリー・カプセル, Sutēji Wairī Kapuseru)" | |
26. | ""Continue" (コンティニュー, Kontinyū)" | |
27. | ""Game Over" (ゲーム・オーヴァー, Gēmu ōvā)" | |
28. | ""Ending–Rockman 1" (エンディング~ロックマン1, Endingu~Rokkuman 1)" | |
29. | ""Ending–Forte" (エンディング~フォルテ, Endingu~Forute)" | |
30. | ""Ending–Blues" (エンディング~ブルース, Endingu~Burūsu)" | |
31. | ""Ending–Rockman 2" (エンディング~ロックマン2, Endingu~Rokkuman 2)" | |
32. | ""S.E. Collection" (S.E.コレクション, S.E. korekushon)" | |
33. | ""Voice Collection" (ヴォイス・コレクション, Voisu korekushon)" |
Reception
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Four reviewers for the Japanese publication Weekly Famitsu scored the PlayStation 2 compilation of the games a total of 22 out of 40.[7]
References
- ^ known in Japan as Rockman: The Power Battle (ロックマン・ザ・パワーバトル)
- ^ MM25: Mega Man & Mega Man X Official Complete Works. Udon Entertainment. 2013. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-897376-79-9.
- ^ Carless, Simon (August 7, 2006). "GameTap Goes Ninja, Gets Into Space Combat". GameSetWatch. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
- ^ Navarro, Alex (June 21, 2004). "Mega Man Anniversary Collection Review for PlayStation 2". GameSpot. Retrieved 2010-04-21.
- ^ Navarro, Alex (June 21, 2004). "Mega Man Anniversary Collection Review for Xbox". GameSpot. Retrieved 2010-04-21.
- ^ 1本で2度おいしい!? 『ロックマン パワーバトルファイターズ』 (in Japanese). Famitsu. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
- ^ ロックマン バトル&ファイターズ (in Japanese). Capcom. Archived from the original on 2010-02-09. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
- ^ Famitsu staff (August 13, 2004). クロスレビュー [Cross Review]. Famitsu (in Japanese). No. 817. Enterbrain. Archived from the original on April 28, 2019. Retrieved April 28, 2019.