- Daioh
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Daioh Developer(s) Athena Co. Ltd. Publisher(s) Sammy (US) Platform(s) Arcade Release date(s) 1993 Genre(s) Shoot 'em up Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously CPU Motorola 68000 (@ 16 MHz), XI-010 (custom sound) Daioh (Great King) is an arcade game developed by Athena Co. Ltd., and released in the US by Sammy in 1993.[1] It is a conventional vertical-scrolling shooter, but with uniquely immense enemies and bosses.
Contents
Story
In the near future, Earth is invaded by warrior aliens who worship crustacean deities and are looking for sacrifices and new believers when they discover Earth. With the alien's advanced technology in mech construction, they cripple Earth's military with Earth's oldest religious structures being their first target; in their places the aliens build their extraterrestrial temples and enslave mankind to serve in the alien's religious bidding. A strike team is eventually assembled to rid Earth of the aliens before they start running out of human sacrifices.
Gameplay
The gameplay to Daioh was typical of most shoot 'em ups in that the player had a trio of different weapons such as a vulcan cannon that, once powered up, spread out across the screen, a missile barrage that would eventually launch homing missiles and an electrical-discharge weapon that would shock enemies until destroyed and could spread on to weaker enemies. Players were also able to accumulate bombs of various types. While the Japanese version used a typical power-up system where roaming colored icons change the player's weapon, similar to Toaplan or Seibu Kaihatsu games, the North American version had a very different gameplay system with a 6-button layout, where players had access to each weapon with a different button press, similar to Radiant Silvergun.
Weapons
- Vulcan - plasma-machine guns that fire straight forward, but spread out as the player collects upgrades.
- Missiles - An array of homing missiles and straight firing rockets that increase in number with upgrades.
- Lightning - Homing electricity weapon that seeks everything within the space-jet's range.
- Bombs:
- Fire ring - A ring of fire that spirals out from the space jet and covers a fair radius of damage.
- Large bomb - A large powerful bomb that detonates in front of the space jet and does a serious amount of damage, but has a small blast range.
- Laser bomb - Three large blue laser beams that covers the vertical length of the ship, but only does acceptable damage.
Characters
- There has 4 characters in this game.
- Ellen Rose Casse is Female Pilot. (Player 1 and has red color)
- Ferris Catruss is Ellen Rose's Navi.
- Kulga Foot is Male Pilot. (Player 2 and has blue color)
- Cyan The Chess is Kulga's Navi.
Influence and appearance in other games
- A pseudo-sequel to the game entitled "Daioh Gale" appears as the sample level in Athena's 1994 title, Dezaemon - Kaite Tsukutte Asoberu (描いて、作って、遊べるデザエモン )[2]
- A follow up to "Daioh Gale", "Daioh Gale ver.2" appears as the sample level in Athena's 1996 title, Dezaemon Plus (デザエモンPLUS )[3]
- Many of the members of the Daioh team developed a 32-bit successor, called Shienryu (1997). The games are remarkably similar, and feature an identical power-up system, and the first level of Shienryu is a remake of the first stage of Daioh.[4]
- A parody of the game entitled "Daioh-P" appears as a sample level in Athena's 1997 Sega Saturn release, Dezaemon 2 (デザエモン2 )[4]
References
- ^ http://www.allgame.com/game.php?id=9867
- ^ http://cheats.ign.com/objects/759/759334.html
- ^ http://www.athena-game.co.jp/d_plus/deza_plus.htm
- ^ a b Szczepaniak, John. Dezaemon. HardcoreGaming101. April 2011
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