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Star Soldier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Star Soldier
Genre(s)Scrolling shooter
Developer(s)Hudson Soft
Publisher(s)Hudson Soft
Platform(s)MSX, NES, TurboGrafx-16, Super Famicom, Nintendo 64, GameCube, Game Boy Advance, Mobile phone, PlayStation Portable, Wii, iOS
First releaseStar Soldier
June 13, 1986
Latest releaseStar Soldier R
March 25, 2008
Spin-offsStarship Hector
Blazing Lazers
Star Parodier

Star Soldier[a] is a series of scrolling shooters mainly developed by Hudson Soft. Konami has owned the rights to the series since their absorption of Hudson Soft in 2012.

The first game, named Star Soldier, appeared on the MSX and NES in 1986, and the series has continued on various gaming systems. Star Soldier itself was released with little change in a compilation for the Super Famicom in 1995, received enhanced remakes for both the GameCube and PlayStation 2 in 2003, and a different remake for the PlayStation Portable in 2005, while the latest installment of the series was released on the Wii as a WiiWare game in 2008. In addition, Super Star Soldier, Final Soldier, Soldier Blade and Star Parodier have been re-released on the Wii's Virtual Console and on the Japanese PC Engine's Best Collection lineup for the PSP.

The Star Soldier games are best known for their distinctive music, unique weapon power-ups, and a special time attack high score mode called "Caravan Mode".[1]

Caravan gaming tournaments

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Star Soldier was developed as a spiritual successor to Tecmo's Star Force, from which it borrows most of its gameplay elements. The Star Force series, along with Hudson's Star Soldier, was often featured in the popular Japanese gaming tournament known as "Hudson All-Japan Caravan Festival". Home ports of Star Soldier games would sometimes feature "Caravan" modes in which the player would race through timed stages while trying to accumulate a high score.

Common elements

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Being an arcade-style game, Star Soldier's objective is primarily based on achieving a high score. The series often makes use of hidden destructible tiles that offer bonus points when shot, but may occasionally power-up the player's ship instead. Bonus points will also be awarded for defeating sequences of enemy formations while they are within a certain proximity to the player's ship, or defeating mini bosses before they have a chance to attack.

Games

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Release timeline
1986Star Soldier
1987Starship Hector
1988
1989
1990Super Star Soldier
1991Final Soldier
1992Soldier Blade
Star Parodier
1993
1994
1995Caravan Shooting Collection
1996
1997
1998Star Soldier: Vanishing Earth
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003Star Soldier (GCN)
2004
2005Star Soldier (PSP)
2006
2007Soldier Collection
2008Star Soldier R

During the Konami Action & Shooting Contest hosted by the Shueisha Game Creator’s Camp and Tokyo Game Show 2022, Beep won the rights from Konami to develop the game through the competition, a game titled Star Soldier RE:VIVE Multiverse is in development.[2]

Crossover

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Compilations and remakes

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Canceled games

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Other media

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  • 1985–1987: Famicom Rocky - manga: Star Soldier is one of the videogames based on the manga.
  • 1986-1987: Famicom Cap - manga: Star Soldier is one of the videogames based on the manga.
  • 1986–1987: Nekketsu! Famicom Shounendan: Star Soldier is one of the videogames based on the manga.
  • 1991–1993: Cyber Boy - manga: Soldier Blade and Star Parodier, two of the video games based on the manga.
  • 1986: Running Boy Star Soldier no Himitsu - anime film

Notes

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  1. ^ Japanese: スターソルジャー, Hepburn: Sutā Sorujā

References

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  1. ^ Hard Core Gaming 101 - Star Soldier
  2. ^ Ahmed, Mansoor (September 28, 2022). "Konami To Award 30 Million Yen Funding And Remake Rights For Classic IP's". eXputer. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  3. ^ "PC Engine Fan - August 1994 (600DPI)". August 1994.
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