Difference between revisions of "Altered Beast"

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==Sequels==  
 
==Sequels==  
The first sequel is ''Altered Beast: Guardian of the Realms''. This game was developed by the now defunct, 3d6 games and published  by [[THQ]]. It was released for [[Gameboy Advance]] in 2002. The game's concept is quite consistent with the original game's formula. There were also new beasts to transform into as well as power ups.
+
The first sequel is ''Altered Beast: Guardian of the Realms''. This game was developed by the now defunct, 3d6 games and published  by [[THQ]]. It was released for [[Game Boy Advance]] in 2002. The game's concept is quite consistent with the original game's formula. There were also new beasts to transform into as well as power ups.
  
 
The second sequel is very different. It is called, ''Jūōki: Project Altered Beast''. It was developed by WOW Entertainment and [[Sega]] for the [[Playstation 2]]. This game is set in a more modern scenario and the story follows a "Genome-Cyborg" named Luke Custer. The player must collect a special serum to transform. The transformation cinematics are gruesomely gory as the main character's body will tear chunks of tissue off and then the Beast's skin will take over. Despite the huge amount of gore, the European game has a 12+ rating. In contrast the Japanese version has a +17 rating. There was never a US release of this game. The game is heavily criticized for bad camera angles and some other crippling programming mistakes.
 
The second sequel is very different. It is called, ''Jūōki: Project Altered Beast''. It was developed by WOW Entertainment and [[Sega]] for the [[Playstation 2]]. This game is set in a more modern scenario and the story follows a "Genome-Cyborg" named Luke Custer. The player must collect a special serum to transform. The transformation cinematics are gruesomely gory as the main character's body will tear chunks of tissue off and then the Beast's skin will take over. Despite the huge amount of gore, the European game has a 12+ rating. In contrast the Japanese version has a +17 rating. There was never a US release of this game. The game is heavily criticized for bad camera angles and some other crippling programming mistakes.

Revision as of 22:18, 7 March 2010

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Altered Beast Arcade Title.png

Altered Beast
System(s): Arcade, DOS, Amstrad CPC, MSX, NES, Atari ST, Commodore Amiga, Sega Master System, Sega Mega Drive, PC Engine CD, Commodore 64, Virtual Console
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Genre: Side-scrolling beat-em-up

















Originally Released for the Arcade in 1988, Altered Beast was developed by the creator of Golden Axe, Makoto Uchida. The games most well-known aspect was that the player could take on the form of "Were Animals". In Japan it was called, (獣王記 Jūōki, which translates to "Beast King's Chronicle") A year later it was ported to various Consoles. Among them were the NES, Sega Mega Drive, Commodore 64, and PC Engine CD just to name a few.

Storyline and Gameplay

In Ancient Rome, the evil Demon God, Neff, has kidnapped Zeus' Daughter, Athena. Zeus revives a centurion from the dead to rescue his daughter. This is where the first stage starts, with Zeus saying the famous "Rise from your grave!" line. The centurion must kill the Wolf-like Demons that flash multiple colors (the Mega Drive version lacks the flashing effect and the characters stay blue instead). Killing them unleashes a spirit ball that the player must grab in order to transform. The first two increase muscle mass slightly while the third spirit ball will tranform the centurion into a beast depending in what stage the player is in. Once the player has changed into a beast he/she can then confront Neff who will appear and say "Welcome to your doom!" and create a smoke cloud which then disappears revealing a monster that also depends upon stage as well. If the player has not collected three spirit balls before reaching Neff the level will start over from the beginning. After each boss fight Neff's head appears from a hole in the ground and he steals all three of the player's Spirit balls causing the player to revert back to his/her normal state. The player the proceeds to jump down the hole continuing to follow Neff.

Stages

Here is a rundown of each stage. There are five stages in all:

Stage 1- This is a graveyard of sorts. The centurion, is revived from here by Zeus. Upon collecting three spirit balls, the player will transform into a Werewolf. The Werewolf has the ability to fire energy balls from its hands and do an energy kick that makes it fly across the screen damaging anything in the way without stopping until the player reaches the edge of the screen. Neff becomes a weird horned demon thing that can launch his head off and grow a new one instantaneously. As a result, Neff can fire up to five heads at the player at nearly the same time. The heads then fall straight to the ground. In the Acrade version of this stage Alex Kidd's name as well as Stella's are engraved on some of the destroyable tombstones. Zombies litter the place, including self destructing and hard punching Zombies.

Stage 2- The player is inside a cave. An enemy who would later appear as a steed in Golden Axe is in this stage. (it acts the same too.) Weird Rattlesnake things jump from the ground and ceiling vertically. Strange blobby things will jump on the players head and suck their health away but is easily destroyed by moving the directional button once it is on the player's head. The player Transforms into a Weredragon, which uses electric attacks. Punching makes the Weredragon shoot lightening from its fist while kicking causes it to generate lightening all over its body. Neff changes into a multi-eyed thingy, who can fire eyes at the player which slowly hover across screen.

Stage 3- In this stage the player is in a canyon. There are bottomless pits which will cause an instant death for the player and any enemies who fall in. The player transforms into a Werebear in this stage. The Werebear can turn opponents to stone by pressing the punch button and can curl up into a ball and bounce with the kick button. Neff changes into a dragon with a snail shell. It must be attacked repeatedly to make its head come out of the snail shell in the arcade version if the player wishes to do any damange. Neff can also shoot slow moving Swirling fire to damage the player. (Hint: The Bouncing ability makes the fight easier in the Mega Drive/Genesis version of the game.)

Stage 4- The Player is getting closer to Neff's Lair. The player is now in some sort of sanctuary. Exploding Zombies make a reappearance in this stage. upon collecting three spirit balls the player changes into the Weretiger. The Weretiger is the same as the WereWolf except that all of its attacks are vertical. Neff changes into a floating dragon thing that shoots fire out of its belly and moves up and down as well as forward some. In the arcade version the fire can pretty much waste a single credit (3 lives) with one shot due to the knock down effect present in the game. He shoots Miniature red Weredragons from his body as well.

Stage 5- This is the underworld, complete with Unicorn men and Goat men as well as a host of other nasty new and old enemies. The player will turn into the Golden Werewolf, which as redundant as it is, is only slightly stronger than the regular Werewolf. That being said The attacks are the same. Neff takes on the form of a Rhino man who ironically was a statue that appeared in the background of Stage 4. This boss charges at the player with his horn extended forward or he tries to punch the player.Right before each attack, puffs of steam come out of his nose and he shakes a little.

Ending - Basically in the arcade version, the ending acts like the whole game was a movie. Monsters and the main characters remove their costumes and celebrate the completion of their movie with a toast and mugs of beer. Then it shows a drawn version of each person involved with the game's creation except that a white bar appears over their eyes giving the impression that the don't want the player to see to actually see their faces. Typical Sega humor for that time period.

The Genesis/Mega Drive version's ending is the same except that the movie cast sequence doesn't happen. Instead credits roll and the Centurion is standing off to the side of the screen with the background of stage 1 behind him. Interestingly the player can control the Centurion during this sequence. When he touches the words of the credits he acts like an enemy knocked him down. He will not die though. In addition to this, if the player decides to play the Genesis/Mega Drive version again without turning off the power, they will start from the beginning of the game but there will be more powerful and dangerous enemies lurking in the earlier levels. (many of the ones that appeared in stage 4 and 5.) The boss fights are the same though as is the ending.

Sequels

The first sequel is Altered Beast: Guardian of the Realms. This game was developed by the now defunct, 3d6 games and published by THQ. It was released for Game Boy Advance in 2002. The game's concept is quite consistent with the original game's formula. There were also new beasts to transform into as well as power ups.

The second sequel is very different. It is called, Jūōki: Project Altered Beast. It was developed by WOW Entertainment and Sega for the Playstation 2. This game is set in a more modern scenario and the story follows a "Genome-Cyborg" named Luke Custer. The player must collect a special serum to transform. The transformation cinematics are gruesomely gory as the main character's body will tear chunks of tissue off and then the Beast's skin will take over. Despite the huge amount of gore, the European game has a 12+ rating. In contrast the Japanese version has a +17 rating. There was never a US release of this game. The game is heavily criticized for bad camera angles and some other crippling programming mistakes.

Production Credits (GEN Version)

Coordinator: No Nukes
Designers: Reiko Kodama, Udi
Programmer: Tasi, Healthy Tats, Momonga Momo
Sound: Toshio Kai
Special Thanks: Team Shinobi

Trivia

  • Altered Beast was the game that was bundled with the original North American release of the Genesis.

Physical Scans

Mega Drive Version

Master System Version