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Sonic the Hedgehog 3
North American cover art
Developer(s)Sonic Team
Publisher(s)Sega
Director(s)Hirokazu Yasuhara
Producer(s)Yuji Naka
Designer(s)Hirokazu Yasuhara
Hisayoshi Yoshida
Takashi Iizuka
Programmer(s)Yuji Naka
Hiroshi Nikaidoh
Masanobu Yamamoto
Artist(s)Takashi Yuda
Satoshi Yokokawa
Composer(s)
List of composers
SeriesSonic the Hedgehog
Platform(s)Sega Genesis, Microsoft Windows
ReleaseSega Genesis
  • NA: February 2, 1994
  • PAL: February 24, 1994
  • JP: May 27, 1994
Microsoft Windows
  • JP: February 14, 1997
  • NA: 1997
  • EU: 1997
Genre(s)Platform game
Mode(s)Single player, multiplayer

Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (Japanese: ソニック・ザ・ヘッジホッグ3(スリー), Hepburn: Sonikku za Hejjihoggu Surī) is a platform video game developed by Sonic Team and published by Sega. The third main game in the Sonic the Hedgehog series, it was released for the Sega Genesis worldwide in February 1994, and in Japan three months later. Following the events of Sonic the Hedgehog 2, Dr. Robotnik's spaceship, the Death Egg, crash-lands on a mysterious floating island. There, Sonic and Tails must once more retrieve the Chaos Emeralds to stop Death Egg from relaunching, while making rounds with the island's guardian, Knuckles the Echidna.

Development of Sonic 3 began shortly after the release of Sonic 2 in November 1992. It was developed simultaneously with Sonic & Knuckles; the games were originally developed as a single game until time constraints and cartridge costs forced the team to split it in two. The Sonic & Knuckles cartridge features "lock-on" technology that allows it to be physically attached to the Sonic 3 cartridge, creating a combined game, Sonic 3 & Knuckles.

As with its two predecessors, Sonic 3 was a critical and commercial success, with critics seeing it as an improvement over previous installments. It sold 1.02 million copies in the United States; though this makes it one of the best-selling Genesis games, its predecessors, bundled with the Genesis in some regions, had sold a combined 21 million. The game has been re-released in compilations and download releases for various platforms, including Sonic Mega Collection for the GameCube and Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360.

Plot

After Sonic the Hedgehog and Miles "Tails" Prower defeat Dr. Robotnik at the end of Sonic the Hedgehog 2, his space station, the Death Egg, crash-lands on a mystical floating landmass called Angel Island. As Robotnik begins to repair the damaged station, he meets up with Knuckles the Echidna. Knuckles is the last surviving member of an ancient echidna civilization that once inhabited the island, as well as the guardian of the Chaos Emeralds, which grant the island its levitation powers.[1] Knowing Sonic and Tails will try to track him down and realizing he can use the emeralds to power the ship, Robotnik dupes Knuckles into believing Sonic is trying to steal the emeralds.

Meanwhile, Sonic and Tails approach Angel Island in their biplane the Tornado. Sonic, possessing the emeralds from the events of Sonic the Hedgehog 2, jumps off the plane and turns into Super Sonic, zooming towards the island. When they arrive, Knuckles ambushes Sonic from underground and knocks the Chaos Emeralds from him, returning him to normal; he then steals the emeralds from them and disappears inland.[1] As Sonic and Tails travel through the levels, they frequently encounter Knuckles, who hinders their progress with various traps.

At the Launch Base Zone, Sonic uses a spare Egg-O-Matic to travel to the Death Egg, and ends up encountering Knuckles on a girder. As usual, Knuckles tries to stop Sonic, but is defeated when the Death Egg re-launches and the girder collapses, sending Knuckles plummeting into the water. Sonic continues to a deck on the Death Egg, where he fights and defeats Robotnik's Big Arm machine. The Death Egg is damaged and falls out of orbit, after which it explodes.[2]

Gameplay

Sonic and Tails explore the underwater portion of Hydrocity, the second zone in Sonic 3.

Sonic 3 is a 2D side-scrolling platformer. At the game's start, players can choose to select Sonic, Tails, or both. In the latter choice, players control Sonic while Tails runs along beside him; a second player can join in at any time and control Tails separately.[3] Sonic 3 adds the ability for Tails to fly for a short time by spinning his twin tails like a propeller;[3] when he gets too tired, he falls. Unlike Sonic, Tails can also swim underwater.[4]

The game takes place over six zones,[5] each divided into two acts. Levels are populated with Robotnik's robots, called "badniks"; Sonic and Tails can defeat badniks by jumping on them or using the "spin dash" attack, which also gives the character a speed boost.[4] The levels include obstacles and other features such as vertical loops, corkscrews, breakable walls, spikes, water that the player can drown in, and bottomless pits.[6] There is a miniboss fight with one of Robotnik's large, powerful robots at the end of the first act of each level and a full boss fight with Robotnik at the end of the second.[7] Reaching a new level saves the player's game to one of six save slots, which can be loaded later.[8]

As with previous Sonic games, Sonic 3 uses rings, scattered throughout the game's levels, as a health system; when the player is attacked without rings, is crushed, falls off-screen, or exceeds the act's ten-minute limit, they lose a life and return to the most recently passed checkpoint. Dying with zero lives gives the player a game over. The levels also include power-ups in television monitors that, when hit, grant the character an extra life, temporary invincibility to most hazards, a number of rings,[9] a shield that allows them to breathe underwater, a shield that allows them to withstand fire from enemy projectiles, or a shield that attracts nearby rings.[10]

Tails in one of the game's special stages, in which the player can earn Chaos Emeralds
A diagram of how rings are generated by walking the perimeter of a group of blue spheres

The game contains two types of "special stages". When the player collects at least 50 rings and passes a checkpoint, they can warp to the first type,[11] which involves bouncing up a gumball machine-like corridor to earn power-ups by hitting a switch. Both sides of the corridor are lined with flippers, which disappear when the character bounces on them, and the switch drops when both flippers supporting it are removed. The corridor's floor contains a bounce pad, which also disappears after one use; falling afterwards causes the player to leave the stage with the most recent power-up collected.[12]

The second type, triggered by entering giant rings found in secret passages, involves running around a 3D map and passing through all of a number of blue spheres arranged in patterns. Passing through a blue sphere turns it red, and touching a red sphere causes the player to leave the stage, unless the player has just completed a cycle around an arrangement of blue spheres, in which case all of these spheres turn to harmless rings. Removing all of the blue spheres gives the player a Chaos Emerald; if Sonic (not Tails) collects all seven, he can become Super Sonic at will, which makes him invincible to most obstacles.[10][13]

Sonic 3 includes a competitive mode: two players, controlling Sonic, Tails, or Knuckles the Echidna (this is the only way to use Knuckles without attaching Sonic & Knuckles to the cartridge), race through one or all of five stages that do not appear in the main game. In these same stages, a single player can compete against the clock in time attacks.[14]

Sonic 3 & Knuckles

Sonic 3 and Sonic & Knuckles were intended to be a single game, but were released separately due to time and financial constraints.[3] The Sonic & Knuckles cartridge features "lock-on" technology that allows it to be physically attached to the Sonic 3 cartridge, creating a combined game, Sonic 3 & Knuckles. The lock-on function is available in some digital releases of the games, such as the Virtual Console service for the Wii.[11]

Sonic 3 & Knuckles allows the player to play Sonic 3 levels as Knuckles or Sonic & Knuckles levels as Tails or both Sonic and Tails.[15] Other new features are the ability to collect Super Emeralds, unlocking new "Hyper" forms for Sonic and Knuckles and a "Super" form for Tails, improved save options, which record the player's lives and continues, and an additional ending that shows Sonic returning the Master Emerald to Angel Island.[16]

Development

As with its predecessors, Sonic 3 was developed by Sonic Team and published by Sega. Yuji Naka and Hirokazu Yasuhara were the primary creators of the Sonic 3 design document and project schedule.[17] Sonic 3 began as a top-down, isometric game, similar to what would became Sonic 3D Blast (1996), but the concept was abandoned early as the team did not want to change the Sonic formula too radically for a sequel.[18]

Sonic 3 and Sonic & Knuckles were originally planned as a single game. However, time was limited and the manufacturing costs of a 34 megabit cartridge[19] with NVRAM would have been prohibitively expensive. Sonic Team split the game in half, giving the developers more time to finish the second part, and splitting the cost between two cartridges.[20] The cartridge has a small amount of non-volatile RAM built into it, which allows the player to save game progress to the game cartridge.[21]

Sonic 3 was released on February 2, 1994 in North America[22] and February 24 in Europe. To help promote the game's European release, Right Said Fred adapted the song "Wonderman" to include references to many aspects of Sonic.[23] The song was used in the game's advertisements and released as a single, which charted in the UK at number 55.[24] In the music video, Fez and Skull from the Pirate TV Sega advertising campaign appeared along with Sonic.[25]

Michael Jackson's involvement

In 2005, former STI director Roger Hector stated that Sega brought in Michael Jackson to compose music for Sonic 3, but following the allegations of sexual abuse against Jackson, his involvement was terminated and the music reworked.[26] The website of musician Cirocco Jones, who contributed music to Sonic 3 and is credited in the game as "Scirocco", credits Jones along with Jackson and Jackson's tour keyboardist and songwriting collaborator Brad Buxer for musical cues for "levels 2 & 3" of "Sonic the Hedgehog".[27] However, senior Sega staff later stated that any involvement of Jackson was arranged without their knowledge, and no contracts or formal agreements were made.[28][29]

In a 2009 interview with French magazine Black & White, Buxer stated that Jackson was involved with some Sonic 3 compositions, but chose to remain uncredited because he was unhappy with the sound capabilities of the Genesis. He also said that the Sonic 3 credits music later became the basis for Jackson's 1996 single "Stranger in Moscow".[30][29] In November 2013, it was discovered that the Ice Cap Zone theme closely resembles "Hard Times", a previously unreleased track from 1982 by the Jetzons, of which Buxer was the keyboardist and co-songwriter.[31]

In October 2013, GameTrailers dedicated an episode of its Pop Fiction series examining Jackson's involvement with the game. Roger Hector, who previously stated that Jackson's involvement in the game was dropped due to the sexual abuse allegations, stated that any similarities to Jackson's music in Sonic 3 was not intentional on Sega's part.[32] However, an anonymous source involved in the game's development reaffirmed Buxer's statements and said Jackson's involvement happened before the scandals came to light, and that his contributions remained in the game with Jackson choosing to remain uncredited. The source specified that the Carnival Night Zone music was one of the pieces Jackson contributed to.[33]

Alternate versions and ports

Compilation releases

Compilations that include the game are Sonic Jam (1997) for the Sega Saturn;[34] Sonic & Knuckles Collection (1997) and Sonic & Garfield Pack (1999) for the PC;[35] Sonic Mega Collection (2002) for the GameCube;[36] Sonic Mega Collection Plus (2004) for the PlayStation 2, Xbox, and PC;[37] Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection (2009) for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3;[38] and Sonic Classic Collection (2010) for the Nintendo DS.[39] Most compilations feature the game largely unchanged. However, Sonic Jam, in addition to featuring the original release, also had a few new "remix" options.[40] "Normal" mode altered the layout of rings and hazards, and "Easy" mode removes certain acts from the game entirely.[41] Sonic & Knuckles Collection features a MIDI rendition of the game's soundtrack, with certain levels featuring completely different music altogether.[42][43]

Digital releases

The game was released for the Wii's Virtual Console in September 2007[44] and for the Xbox Live Arcade on June 10, 2009.[45] The Xbox version has enhanced graphics for high definition displays as well as online leaderboards and support for multiplayer via split screen and Xbox Live. The original method of saving the game is replaced with a revamped version that allows progress to be saved anywhere during play, except after completing the game.[16] When the PC version was released via the Steam software, the game and its successor were released together as Sonic 3 & Knuckles as originally intended, with the player (even if playing as Tails) simply continuing at the beginning of Sonic & Knuckles after finishing Sonic 3.[46]

Reception

The Genesis version of the game sold 1.02 million copies in the United States.[59] While Sonic 1's worldwide sales have been estimated at 15 million[60] and Sonic 2's at 6 million,[61] Sonic 3, unlike these two, was not bundled with the Genesis console itself. However, Sonic 3 is still one of the best-selling Genesis games of all time.[62]

Like its predecessors, Sonic 3 received positive reviews. It holds a score of 89% at review aggregator GameRankings based on 5 reviews.[47] Critics generally felt Sonic 3 was the best game in the series so far. Andrew Humphreys of Hyper, who declared himself not a Sonic fan, said it was "undoubtedly" the best of the series, including the acclaimed but obscure Sonic CD, though he admitted having preferred Sonic 2's special stages by a small margin.[54] Sega Magazine, however, stated that Sonic 3 has better special stages and was not only superior to Sonic 2 as a whole but would be "a serious contender for the Best Platform Game Ever award".[57] Sega Power wrote that despite their skepticism, they found it "excellent" and easily "the most explorable and playable" in the series.[58] Electronic Gaming Monthly also compared Sonic 3 favorably to Sonic 1, 2, and CD and awarded it their "Game of the Month" award.[51] They later ranked it number 1 in The EGM Hot 50, indicating that it received the highest average score of any game they'd reviewed in the past year.[63] Thomas of IGN stated that Sonic 3 "completed the trilogy as the best of them all."[3] Whitehead, however, considered Sonic & Knuckles superior.[52]

Some critics felt that Sonic 3 had innovated too little from previous Sonic games. Humphreys of Hyper saw only "a few new features"[54] while Sega Power thought it was "not all that different"[58] and Nintendo Life writer Damien McFerran said that "there's not a lot of new elements here to be brutally frank".[55] Provo stated that the game's most significant addition was its save system.[53] However, he and Electronic Gaming Monthly also both enjoyed the new power-ups.[51][53] Many aspects of the game's level design were praised; Electronic Gaming Monthly and Sega Power enjoyed the game's expansive stages, secret areas, much less linear level design, and difficulty.[51][58] Mean Machines agreed, describing the game as "a rollercoater ride from start to finish" and listing Carnival Night as their favorite level, which they described as "probably the most slickly programmed portion of game in Megadrive history".[56] Humphreys and Mean Machines felt that the game was too short, but they and Sega Magazine felt that its two-player mode and the Emerald collecting would significantly extend the title's replay value.[54][56][57] On the other hand, Whitehead said that the stages' large sizes would keep players sufficiently engrossed.[52] Sega Magazine also enjoyed having the ability to play as Knuckles in the two-player mode.[57]

The visuals were very well received. Humphreys described Sonic 3 as "one of the most beautiful games around" and full of "flashy new visual tricks", highlighting Sonic's ascension up pipes and spiraling pathways as particularly inventive.[54] Sega Magazine exclaimed that its graphics were "brilliant" even for a Sonic title,[57] while Provo praised the "elaborate" backgrounds.[53] Mean Machines thought similarly, giving special praise to the camera's quick scrolling, the diversity of the level themes, and the "chunkier, more detailed" overall aesthetic.[56] Thomas and Provo especially enjoyed the use of wordless cutscenes to create a coherent story and thematically connect the zones.[3][53] McFerran, however, felt that the visuals had been downgraded, particularly Sonic's "dumpier" sprite and "the infamous 'dotty' textures".[55]

The sound effects and music were also well received, though somewhat less so than the visuals. Sega Magazine described them as "brilliant" and "far superior" to Sonic 2's.[57] Mean Machines stated that every level had "great tunes" and sound effects and particularly praised the game's ending music.[56] However, Humphreys described the sound as "Sonicky ... with the emphasis on the 'icky'"; he also found it strikingly similar to the first two Sonic games' soundtracks.[54] Thomas thought the music was "impressive", but not quite on par with Sonic 2's.[3]

Reviews of later ports have been slightly less positive; its Xbox 360 release has scores of 78% and 79% at GameRankings and Metacritic, respectively.[48][49] Some critics, such as Adam Ghiggino of PALGN, felt the game had been insufficiently upgraded for its re-releases;[10] Dan Whitehead of Eurogamer wished online co-op had been implemented.[52] Frank Provo of GameSpot and Lucas M. Thomas of IGN wished Sega had re-released the game and its successor together as Sonic 3 & Knuckles instead.[3][53]

Mega ranked it the fifth best Genesis game ever in November 1994.[64] In 2014, GamesRadar ranked Sonic 3 & Knuckles as the seventh best Genesis game;[65] Jeremy Parish of US Gamer ranked the combined title eighth on a similar list in 2013.[66]

Legacy

Issues 33 and 34 of Sonic the Comic and issue 13 of the Archie Comics version of a Sonic the Hedgehog comic consisted of their own comic adaptations of the game.[67] For Sonic's twentieth anniversary, Sega released Sonic Generations, a game that remade aspects of various past games from the franchise.[68] The Nintendo 3DS version of the game features a remake of the game's final boss, "Big Arms". Additionally, a re-arranged version of the "Game Over" theme appeared in the game.[69]

References

  1. ^ a b Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (Genesis) instruction manual, p. 4.
  2. ^ This is retconned in Sonic & Knuckles, where the Death Egg is shown to have collapsed on Angel Island rather than being outright destroyed.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Thomas, Lucas M. (September 11, 2007). "Sonic the Hedgehog 3 Review". IGN. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
  4. ^ a b Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (Genesis) instruction manual, pp. 8–9.
  5. ^ Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (Genesis) instruction manual, pp. 16–17.
  6. ^ Sonic Team (February 2, 1994). Sonic the Hedgehog 3. Sega.
  7. ^ Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (Genesis) instruction manual, pp. 4–5.
  8. ^ Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (Genesis) instruction manual, p. 10.
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  11. ^ a b Nelson, Jared. "A Guide to 'Sonic The Hedgehog' Version 2.0's Hidden Level-select, Debug Mode, and Many More Secrets". Touch Arcade. Retrieved January 19, 2015.
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  17. ^ "Roger Hector: Director of STI Interviews". EmulationZone. October 2005. Retrieved January 22, 2015. Once Naka & Yasuhara agreed on a general design approach, they drew up a schedule and started working
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  59. ^ "US Platinum Videogame Chart". The Magic Box. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
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  61. ^ Boutros, Daniel (August 4, 2006). "A Detailed Cross-Examination of Yesterday and Today's Best-Selling Platform Games". Gamasutra. p. 5. Retrieved December 8, 2006.
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  63. ^ "The EGM Hot 50". Electronic Gaming Monthly (69). Ziff Davis: 44–48. April 1995.
  64. ^ Mega (26). Maverick Magazines: 74. November 1994. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  65. ^ GamesRadar Staff (August 14, 2014). "Best Sega Genesis/Mega Drive games of all time". GamesRadar. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  66. ^ Parish, Jeremy (October 29, 2013). "The 10 Best Genesis/Mega Drive and Top 5 Sega CD Games". Eurogamer. Retrieved January 5, 2014. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  67. ^ Narcisse, Evan. "These Are the Guys Who Make Sonic's Life Hell in His Comic Book Series". Kotaku. Retrieved January 6, 2015.
  68. ^ "Sonic Generations for 3DS". Metacritic. Retrieved January 6, 2015.
  69. ^ Lee, Patrick. "Bark beats bite: 7 video game boss themes better than the actual boss fights". The A.V. Club. Retrieved January 6, 2015.

External links