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Darius Gaiden
System(s): Sega Saturn
Publisher: Acclaim , Taito (JP)
Developer: Aisystem Tokyo
Developer(s) of original games: Taito
Sound driver: SCSP/CD-DA (15 tracks)
Genre: Shoot-'em-Up
Number of players: 1-2
Release
Date
RRP
Code
JP
1995-12-15
¥5,8005,800
T-1102G
US
1995
$59.9959.99[2]
T-8123H
EU
1996-03 [1]
T-8123H-50
This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it .
Darius Gaiden (ダライアス外伝) is the third main entry in Taito 's Darius series of horizontal space shoot-'em-up games, first released in 1994 in arcades as a sequel to Darius II . During development it was known as Darius III . Why it was changed to a"gaiden" type of story (roughly meaning "side story"), is unknown.
The game's soundtrack was composed by Taito 's house band Zuntata .
Gaiden was ported to the Sega Saturn and released in late 1995, curiously arriving before the Saturn port of Darius II . It was the second of two Darius games to be brought to Sega systems - its arcade successor, G-Darius , which used polygonal graphics, skipped the Saturn in favour of the PlayStation in 1998.
Darius Gaiden follows the established formula closely, but dropped the multiple screen setup. Difficulty is considered to be lower than in part II.
So called black hole bombs have been added, that damage enemies and neutralize projectiles, but also sucks in power ups. Not using any of these yeilds a special score bonus at the end of the game, but is tied to not using continues.
Stages are selectable in the usual branching path fashion after defeating a boss. Each path has its unique ending
Strangely autofire, a common feature in shooting game ports, is missing from options. It must be activated by a cheat code.
Trivia
The game upholds the series tradition of offering branching paths, with the "upper" routs being easier to clear. However, the upper routes also offer more scoring chances, which goes against the usual risk=reward design in arcade games. Scores are lumped together in a single table and not sorted by the path taken through the game but total score only.
The game has a dynamic difficulty level, depending on power ups collected, survival time etc.
Production credits
Producer: Hidehiro Fujihara
Game Design: Hisakazu Kato , Akira Kurabayashi, Masami Kikuchi, Hidetaka Harada, Naoto Omura, Rintaro Doi, Katsumi Kaneoka, Hisayoshi Ogura , Katsuhisa Ishikawa
Thanks: Kentaro Matsumura
Art Director: KAT, Masami Kikuchi, Baw-Baw
Programmer: Kurabar, Naoto Omura, Hidetaka Harada
Hardware Engineer: Katsumi Kaneoka
Decorator: Rintaro Doi
Sound Director: OGR (Zuntata), Katsuhisa Ishikawa (Zuntata)
Bit Pattern: Makoto Fujita, Ucky Maeda, Toru Kawaishi, Miwa Kamiya
Special Thanks: Hisao Shimizu, Rie Amino, Takako Akitsu, Masahiro Tashiro, Nakayama Jotohei, Nobuyuki Hayashi, Ryoto Komai, Yasunobu Kosokabe, Saori Hiratsuka, Ryota Sasaki, Naoto Yagishita, Takao Yoshiba, Nobuaki Kuroki, Yuichi Onogi, Makoto Osaka, Yoshihiro Mori, Naomitsu Abe, Masatoshi Tsuneoka, Yosuke Tsuda, V.G. Tokyo All Staff, Papara Kaito, Yoshinari Mitani, I.G Tatsunoko, ...And Default Members
Presented by: Taito ®
Source : In-game credits [3]
Track list
2. VISIONNERZ: Genshibito (04:38)
VISIONNERZ~幻視人~
EN: VISIONNERZ ~Hallucinated People~
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
3. (Punctuation) (00:06)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
4. Burst Out (01:53)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
5. Induction (01:48)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
6. E.E.G. (04:16)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
7. Axon (02:20)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
8. TOUEI (04:11)
投影
EN: Reflection
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
9. Fake (02:02)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
10. Singing In The Brain (01:46)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
11. Tranquilizers (02:58)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
12. SELF (04:12)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
13. Refrain (01:39)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
14. Name (00:56)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
15. End Titles (02:30)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
16. over (00:09)
Composed by: Hisayoshi Ogura
► Running time: 37:38
Promotional material
Physical scans
Sega Retro Average
Publication
Score
Source
CD Consoles (FR)
67
№15, p92/93[4]
Consoles + (FR)
88
№51, p98/99[5]
Computer & Video Games (UK)
87
№172, p46/47[1]
Edge (UK)
60
№30, p70[6]
Famitsu (JP)
83
№366, p33
Fun Generation (DE)
40
MAN!AC (DE)
76
Mean Machines Sega (UK)
79
№42, p76/77[7]
Mean Machines Sega (UK)
69
№43, p88[8]
Player One (FR)
90
№62, p94[9]
Sega Power (UK)
35
№77, p52/53
Sega Saturn Magazine (UK)
80
№5, p72/73[10]
Sega Saturn Magazine (JP)
80
№1995-14, p200[11]
Sega Saturn Magazine (readers) (JP)
89
№, p9[12]
Ultimate Future Games (UK)
79
№16, p68/69
Saturn, US
Cover
Disc
Manual
Saturn, EU
Cover
Disc
Saturn, JP
Cover
References
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 File:CVG UK 172.pdf, page 46 Cite error: Invalid <ref>
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↑ File:GameGamePlayers US 0904.pdf, page 66
↑ File:DariusGaiden_Saturn_JP_SSEnding.pdf
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↑ 6.0 6.1 File:Edge UK 030.pdf, page 70 Cite error: Invalid <ref>
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↑ 7.0 7.1 File:MeanMachinesSega42UK.pdf, page 76 Cite error: Invalid <ref>
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↑ 8.0 8.1 File:MeanMachinesSega43UK.pdf, page 88 Cite error: Invalid <ref>
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↑ 9.0 9.1 File:PlayerOne FR 062.pdf, page 94 Cite error: Invalid <ref>
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↑ File:SSM_UK_05.pdf, page 72
↑ File:SSM_JP_19951222_1995-14.pdf, page 202
↑ 12.0 12.1 Saturn no Game wa Sekai Ichi~i~i~i!: Satamaga Dokusha Race Zen Kiroku , SoftBank Publishing, page 11 Cite error: Invalid <ref>
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↑ Electronic Gaming Monthly , "March 1996" (US; 1996-xx-xx), page 29
↑ Famitsu , "1995-12-22" (JP; 1995-12-08), page 1
↑ Fun Generation , "03/96" (DE; 1996-02-12), page 48
↑ GameFan , "Volume 4, Issue 2: February 1996" (US; 1996-xx-xx), page 18
↑ Game Players , "Vol. 9 No. 4 April 1996" (US; 1996-03-19), page 66
↑ GamePro , "April 1996" (US; 1996-xx-xx), page 82
↑ GamePro , "May 1996" (UK; 1996-04-xx), page 38
↑ Game Informer , "April 1996" (US; 1996-0x-xx), page 59
↑ Joypad , "Février 1996 (Joypad International supplement)" (FR; 1996-0x-xx), page 24
↑ MAN!AC , "02/96" (DE; 1996-01-10), page 41
↑ Mega Fun , "03/96" (DE; 1996-02-20), page 80
↑ Saturn Fan , "1996 No. 4" (JP; 1996-02-02), page 62
↑ Saturn+ , "Easter/April 1996" (UK; 1996-03-07), page 62
↑ Sega Magazin , "März 1996" (DE; 1996-02-14), page 68
↑ Sega Power , "April 1996" (UK; 1996-02-15), page 52
↑ Sega Pro , "March 1996" (UK; 1996-01-25), page 60
↑ Sega Saturn Magazine , "March 1996" (UK; 1996-02-24), page 72
↑ Sega Saturn Magazine , "1995-14 (1995-12-22)" (JP; 1995-12-08), page 202
↑ Total Saturn , "Volume One Issue Four" (UK; 1996-12-29), page 20
↑ Ultimate Future Games , "March 1996" (UK; 1996-0x-xx), page 68
↑ Última Generación , "Febrero 1996" (ES; 1996-0x-xx), page 90
↑ Video Games , "2/96" (DE; 1996-01-24), page 83
↑ VideoGames , "May 1996" (US; 1996-04-23), page 63