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  • GAME REVIEWS

    Friday, February 12, 2010

    Cyber Knight

    ~ CYBER KNIGHT ~
    Compile / Group SNE / Tonkin House
    HuCard
    1990

    I bought this game only because I was looking for some cheap throw-ins while wrapping up a huge transaction, and CK was priced at a mere two bucks. I had no idea what it was about, but going by just the name, I suspected it to be an awful, archaic action title. It's actually a mecha RPG; I guess you could view it as sort of a "prehistoric" Xenogears.



    Once I found out the truth, I wasn't exactly more eager to play it, as I didn't expect much from an ancient chip RPG at that time. But I was compelled to give it a fair chance by its incredible opening, which depicts spaceships locked in combat.



    Obviously, the sequence isn't particularly special visually, but man, the music absolutely rocks (with some of the best drum sounds in a chip game, for sure), making the scene extremely intense. In fact, the soundtrack is good all the way through, with at least three or four other excellent tunes included in the high-quality batch. CK is worth playing through just to hear some good (and atypical) HuCard audio. But before you get going, you'll want to make sure that you've got two things:

    1) A good guide. There's a great web page devoted to the Super Famicom version,
    and 95% of the walkthrough it links to is applicable to the PCE game, so you'll know where to go and what to do when you get there. There are a couple areas cited in the FAQ that I either didn't have to or wasn't allowed to visit, and one or two strings of events played out in a different order for me; but everything that you do need to do to beat the PCE version is mentioned in there.

    2) Knowledge of katakana, at the least! I'm not usually one to try to dissuade folks from experimenting their way through an import RPG, but I really don't see it happening in this one. The game is just too complicated for people to fiddle their way to victory.

    How complicated is it? Well, you know how annoying it can be when you're wandering around a town in a Japanese RPG and you're just trying to talk to the right person and trigger the next event? Well, imagine if you didn't just have to bumble around a small six-house village, but THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE instead. In Cyber Knight, you have to travel not only to different planets, but also to entirely different solar systems. And there isn't a simple defined path through the stars. The game is very open-ended, giving you access to lots of different locations at once, and you often have a number of separate quests you can pursue at any given time. Yes, the aforementioned FAQ does tell you where to go, but it won't help much if you can't read the in-game katakana.

    The Cyber Knight play system is not simple by any means. You can select three of the six available characters to partake in a given quest, and you have to take into consideration their respective classes (whether they specialize in science or mechanics or whatever) because certain skills are needed in certain missions. You've also got five different mecha to select from, each with its own respective strengths and weaknesses, not to mention MANY different weapon types. You can lug along everything from lightsabers to plasma guns to nova flames to rocket launchers, although you'll need to experiment with all the different types to figure out which weapons work best against which foes. There are also assorted defense fields to mess around with. And even aboard your home base (a starship), you'll have plenty of different menus to figure out.



    It might seem like a lot to contend with; Cyber Knight really is kind of like a modern RPG trapped in the body of an old one. But as is the case with quality modern games, once you get rolling with CK's system, it'll seem pretty simple after all, and you'll get to enjoy the finer points of the adventure. You'll rush to the aid of cavemen, robots, and big pink whales...



    ...while using your mighty weaponry to annihilate foes ranging from dinosaurs to bizarre, indescribable aliens, as the catchy music rocks all the while.



    Actually, the adventure itself might prove a bit too simple for some. Once you arrive at a planet, you usually don't get to do much exploring or anything. You just talk to a particular person or solve a simple maze (only two locations have labyrinths that are at all complex) and get on with your business.



    The appeal of the game, outside of the audio elements and the interesting acquaintances you make, mainly lies in the strategic combat, as you get to position your mecha on the field in addition to considering the weapon selection/experimentation aspects. But while the enemies you run into are intriguing concept-wise and can put up a fight, they don't look very good. CK isn't a top-tier game visually by any stretch of the imagination. You don't even get to fight any large enemies until the berserker queen at the very end.



    But CK is still a very nice sleeper title if you're up for the reading requirements. From what I gather, there's a translated rendition of the Super Famicom version somewhere out there. But we all know that the cool way to play the game is on the PC Engine in a language we can't understand.

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