Action 52
From Sega Retro
Action 52 | ||||||||||
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System(s): Sega Mega Drive | ||||||||||
Publisher: Active Enterprises | ||||||||||
Developer: FarSight Technologies[1] | ||||||||||
Supporting companies: Nu Romantic Productions (sound) | ||||||||||
Original system(s): Nintendo Family Computer | ||||||||||
Developer(s) of original games: Active Enterprises | ||||||||||
Game total: 52 | ||||||||||
Sound driver: GEMS | ||||||||||
Genre: Compilation | ||||||||||
Number of players: 1-2 | ||||||||||
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Action 52 is an unlicensed Sega Mega Drive game compilation multicart developed by FarSight Technologies and published by Active Enterprises. An extensively-redesigned port of the publisher's infamous 1991 Nintendo Entertainment System multicart Action 52, it was released exclusively in the United States in May 1995 at a retail price of $199.[2] While considered far superior to the original release, the title remains relatively basic and poor in gameplay design.
Contents
Games
Each game is color coded, with a legend on the first screen when the cartridge is booted up: Expert, Intermediate, Beginner, Two Player, Special. All of the games can be exited by pausing then pressing while paused; which will return the game to the title screen.
List of games
1: Go Bonkers (expert) | |
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Known simply as "Bonkers" on the in-game list. You control a green ball that will bounce all the way up and all the way down on a vertical field. You can move it left and right with the D-pad. The ball will destroy blocks of matching colors; touching a grey block with a different color will change the ball's color (however, the ball cannot be changed back to green using the gray blocks with green in the middle). Hitting a grey block with a black + in the middle will make you lose one ball and revert the ball color to green. After all colored blocks are removed, simply remove the remaining blocks with green in the middle to clear the level. Also worth mentioning, this is one of the few games of the cart to have a title screen. | |
2: Darksyne (expert) | |
You are a ship stuck in a room with enemies. As in Asteroids, you are bound by gravity, and holding and using the D-pad will allow you some limited form of motion. Holding gives you a shield with limited energy. shoots. Destroy all the enemies without hitting the walls of the level to move on to the next. | |
3: Dyno-Tennis (two player) | |
Simple tennis game. Player 1 is the orange dinosaur; Player 2 is the purple one. and move. swings. Most points after 10 sets wins. | |
4: Ooze (expert) | |
Platforming run-and-gun where you play as the Ooze Boy. shoots (notoriously, Ooze Boy is not able to shoot while jumping); jumps. crouches; moving while crouched crawls. Falling from too high a slope will kill Ooze Boy. You are tasked to collect keys throughout each level, in order to progress to the next. | |
5: Star Ball (expert) | |
Simple pinball game. flips the left flipper; flips the right. There appears to be multiple tables; the manual mentions that collecting all bonuses and destroying all the enemies you can, will take to the next table. | |
6: Sidewinder (expert) | |
After Burner/G-LOC clone, except you can move freely to the left and to the right (with scrolling too!). fires. | |
7: Daytona (expert) | |
Simple 3D racing game. Hold to accelerate; let go to brake. Steer with and . Hit to switch gears. The only real goal appears to be "get 3 laps" but the game has no indicator telling lap count or finish line — the level will just fade out. | |
8: 15 Puzzle (expert) | |
...15 puzzle. D-pad to move cursor; to move block. | |
9: Sketch (expert) | |
Line art canvas. D-pad moves the pencil. Hold to draw. changes line thickness. changes line color. This is similar to Art Alive! by using the same pencil sprite and other features. | |
10: Star Duel (two player) | |
11: Haunted Hills (expert) | |
Known as "Haunted Hill" in-game. | |
12: Alfredo & the Fettucinni's (expert) | |
Known as "Alfredo" in-game. | |
13: The Cheetahmen (expert) | |
Save all the encaged cheetah kittens in every level. jumps and attacks. | |
14: Skirmish (two player) | |
15: Depth Charge (expert) | |
16: Minds Eye (expert) | |
17: Alien Attack (expert) | |
18: Billy Bob (expert) | |
19: Sharks (intermediate) | |
20: Knockout (two player) | |
21: Intruder (intermediate) | |
22: Echo (intermediate) | |
23: Freeway (intermediate) | |
24: Mousetrap (intermediate) | |
25: Ninja (intermediate) | |
26: Slalom (intermediate) | |
27: Dauntless (intermediate) | |
28: Force One (intermediate) | |
29: Spidey (intermediate) | |
30: Appleseed (intermediate) | |
31: Street Skater (intermediate) | |
Known simply as "Skater" in the game. | |
32: Sunday Driver (intermediate) | |
33: Star Evil (intermediate) | |
34: Air Command (intermediate) | |
35: Shootout (intermediate) | |
36: Bombs Away (intermediate) | |
37: Speed Boat (beginner) | |
38: Dedant (beginner) | |
39: G-Force Fighter (beginner) | |
Referred as "G Fighter" in-game | |
40: Man At Arms (beginner) | |
41: Norman (beginner) | |
42: Armor Battle (two player) | |
43: Magic Bean (beginner) | |
44: Apache Chopper (beginner) | |
Known as "Apache" in-game | |
45: Paratrooper (beginner) | |
46: Sky Avenger (beginner) | |
47: Sharp Shooter (beginner) | |
48: Meteor (beginner) | |
49: Black Hole (beginner) | |
50: The Boss (beginner) | |
51: 1st Video Game (two player) | |
Referred as "First Game" at the in-game menu. The game itself is a rendition of Pong (which post-dates the first "video game" by many years). | |
52: Action 52 Challenge (special) | |
Simply referred as "Challenge" in-game, is an endurance test which puts the player into a random series of the highest levels of the other remaining 46 single-player games. |
History
A Nintendo Super Famicom version of Action 52 was advertised alongside the Sega Mega Drive version, but was ultimately unreleased (presumably due to Active Enterprises' bankruptcy.)
Magazine articles
- Main article: Action 52/Magazine articles.
Promotional material
also published in:
- Electronic Gaming Monthly (US) #65: "December 1994" (1994-xx-xx)[3]
Physical scans
Sega Retro Average | ||||||||||||||
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40 | |
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Based on 2 reviews |
Technical information
- Main article: Action 52/Technical information.
References
- ↑ http://www.farsightstudios.com/history.htm (Wayback Machine: 2001-12-01 17:24)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 GamePro, "May 1992" (US; 1992-xx-xx), page 16
- ↑ Electronic Gaming Monthly, "December 1994" (US; 1994-xx-xx), page 359
- ↑ 1700 igr dlya Sega, "" (RU; 2001-xx-xx), page 25
- ↑ GamePro, "March 1994" (US; 1994-xx-xx), page 54
Action 52 | |
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