Metal Black (video game)

Metal Black
Developer(s) Taito
Publisher(s) Taito
Designer(s) Takatsuna Senba
Composer(s) Yasuhisa Watanabe
Platform(s) Arcade
Sega Saturn
PlayStation 2
Xbox
Microsoft Windows
Release date(s)

Arcade

Sega Saturn

  • JP: May 24, 1996

PlayStation 2, Xbox, Windows

Genre(s) Horizontal scrolling shooter
Mode(s) Single player, Two player
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system Taito F2 System
Display Raster (Horizontal)

Metal Black (メタルブラック Metaru Burakku) is a 1991 arcade shoot 'em up released by Taito. It is both "Project Gun Frontier 2" and "Darius III"; the game was developed by the Gun Frontier team, and ties to the original Darius development still exist.

Players control the Black Fly on their mission to defeat the forces of Nemesis in hopes of saving the human race. Players collected many small power-ups to build their weapon's power. Players could then unleash a large beam attack that would drain their power level back to zero. Bosses could also collect these power-ups and use similar beam attacks. When a player's beam collided with a bosses, it would culminate in a spectacular reaction before the more powerful attack would push the weaker down.

Story

The year is 2042: A companion star of the planet Jupiter appears a few Astronomical Units away from the planet and not long before its discovery propels the asteroids along Jupiter's orbit which sends a wave of meteorites towards the Earth. As the Earthlings struggled to survive, extraterrestrial cybernetic invaders from beyond the distant star used the meteorites as cover for invading Earth with little resistance, intending to plunder Earth for inorganic materials needed to sustain their forms. Both the aliens and the star they came from were quickly dubbed 'Nemesis.'

What resistance the aliens did face from Earth's combined international defense forces were quickly obliterated by the alien's powerful beam weapons. Earth's scientists studied the molecules that powered the alien's weaponry which started to litter the Earth and called the molecule 'Newalone.' With Newalone in their hands, scientists quickly began Project Metal Black, which focused on developing at least twenty-thousand human space craft capable of wielding the same beam-weaponry as the aliens. The space craft was known as the CF-345 Black Fly, named by its method of Newalone energy use.

However, ten years after the invasion, Earth's remaining diplomats passed a treaty on to the aliens under a peaceful surrender, which promised to keep all of Earth's remaining forces from attacking: This applied to Project Metal Black which sealed the Black Fly space craft from the people. The Earth's natural resources were dying and the planet's population was thinning... it was only a matter of time until someone discovered Metal Black and struck back.

Gameplay

The gameplay to Metal Black was unique in that there were no alternate weapons or bombs: the player's only weapon power-up were the innumerous Newalone molecules scattered by Nemesis. Collecting Newalone increased the player's beam level which served as the player's only defense. The more Newalone the player picks up, the stronger their standard beam fire became.

When reaching a mid-level or maximum level on the ship's Beam Level gauge, players could then unleash a very large beam capable of destroying various enemies as well as causing a lightening effect that would briefly shock the screen and consequentially destroy enemies behind and around the Black Fly.[1]

However, certain enemies also had beam gauges of their own, most notably the end-level bosses who would in turn collect as much Newalone as they could and unleash their own beam weapon. When the player and the boss' beam weapons fired simultaneously, one beam would overpower the other depending on how high each gauge was, initiating a 'Beam Duel.' Players would have to mash the beam button repeatedly in order to keep the large beam blast away from them which would accumulate into a large ball of destructive matter. The blast would change in color depending on which wielder had a stronger beam.[1]

There were six levels in the game. After the first level of each three sets of levels, a Bonus Stage would occur to indicate the player's advancement into space (the first bonus stage occurs when the players leave Earth's atmosphere and the second occurred as players entered a worm hole as a shortcut to Jupiter). Each Bonus stage had the player encircle a group of crustacean shaped enemies. The player had to lock on to the moving targets in order to launch cluster missiles at them for extra points. Each bonus stage was timed so as to challenge the player in seeking and destroying before the timer ran out.

Production

When development began on Metal Black, it was originally planned as Darius III , where Proco and Tiat would return from Sol after the events of Darius II, only to find Darius horribly ravaged by the Belser Army. Taito, however, ultimately decided that this was too bleak a scenario for the Darius series, and so gave Metal Black its own setting. Vestiges of the game's time as a Darius title still persist in a select few marine-themed enemies (e.g. sunfish-shaped ships, Feeder's similarity to a giant rattail, diatom-like enemies in the fourth stage, the giant Opabinia that supports and powers Daio-to-Gishiin at the end of the third stage, the aircraft carrier-bearing hermit crab in the middle of the first stage).

Home releases

Metal Black was ported in 1996 to the Sega Saturn; in 2006, it was included in the compilation Taito Legends 2 for Windows, Xbox, and PlayStation 2.

Legacy

A similar "beam duel" system combat was featured in Taito's G-Darius. The game Border Down (made by G.rev, which includes many former Taito employees) also featured such a system, and the game itself references Metal Black in other ways.

The Black Fly appears as a downloadable ship for Taito's Dariusburst: Chronicle Saviours for PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, and PC.

References

  1. 1 2 "METAL BLACK".
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