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{{short description|1987 video game}}{{Distinguish|Oriental Heroes}}{{Infobox video game
{{short description|1987 video game}}
{{Distinguish|Oriental Heroes}}
{{Infobox video game
| title = Oriental Hero
| title = Oriental Hero
| image = Oriental Hero.jpg
| image = Oriental Hero.jpg
| caption =
| caption =
| released = 1987
| released = {{start date|1987|07}}
| designer =
| designer = Michel Nass <br> Tommy Gardh
| programmer = {{ubl|Michel Nass|Tommy Gardh}}
| artist = Michel Nass
| composer = Michel Nass
| programmer = Tommy Gardh
| publisher = [[Firebird Software]]
| publisher = [[Firebird Software]]
| developer = Tron Software
| developer = Tron Software
| platforms = [[ZX Spectrum]]
| platforms = [[ZX Spectrum]]
| genre = [[Platform fighter]]
| genre = [[Beat 'em up]]
}}
}}

'''''Oriental Hero''''' is a ninja-themed [[platform fighter]] video game which was published in 1987 exclusively for the [[ZX Spectrum]] by the [[Firebird Software]] Silver label. The game was developed by Tron Software and is the sequel to their earlier multi-computing-platform effort, ''[[Ninja Master]]'' (1986).
'''''Oriental Hero''''' is a ninja-themed [[side-scrolling]] [[beat 'em up|beat-'em-up]] video game published in 1987 exclusively for the [[ZX Spectrum]] under the [[Firebird Software]] Silver Range label. It was developed by Tron Software as the sequel to their 1986 multi-platform release, ''[[Ninja Master]]''.


==Gameplay and plot==
==Gameplay and plot==
[[File:Oriental Hero screenshot.png|thumb|left|The player-ninja on the road to Zerwin. Enemies scroll into view from the right.]]
[[File:Oriental Hero screenshot.png|thumb|left|The player ninja on the road to Zerwin. Enemies scroll into view from the left and the right.<ref name=yoursinclair />]]
''Oriental Hero'' centers on the ninja protagonist, who after achieving victory in the prequel game ''[[Ninja Master]]'' travels on the road leading to the palace of Zerwin the Wizard, who the protagonist must eventually defeat in order to win the title of Supreme Oriental Combat Master.<ref name=crash />
''Oriental Hero'' centers on the ninja protagonist, who after achieving victory in the previous game ''[[Ninja Master]]'' travels on the road leading to the palace of Zerwin the Wizard, who the protagonist must eventually defeat in order to win the title of Supreme Oriental Combat Master.<ref name=crash />


The game comprises four levels, each a horizontally scrolling platform on which the player-ninja must fight several subordinate wizards and winged creatures before reaching the [[Boss (video games)|boss]] at the end of the level.<ref name=crash /> The player-ninja can defend himself by jumping or ducking;<ref name=crash /> his only fighting moves are punching, kicking, and [[Flying kick|flying-kicking]].<ref name=yoursinclair /> The winged creatures appear rapidly and can kill the player with one hit but can themselves be killed with one hit. The wizards on the other hand take three hits to kill and wield [[Dart (missile)|dart]]s. Like the subordinate wizards, the bosses at the end of each level—the Terrible Indian Cobra, the Highly Technical Triple Armed War Unit, Ivan Dragovich the Russian Master, and Zerwin the Wizard<ref name=crash />—can be killed with three hits.<ref name=sinclairuser />
The game comprises four levels, each a horizontally scrolling platform on which the player-ninja must fight several ground and flying enemies and projectiles before reaching the [[Boss (video games)|boss]] at the end of the level.<ref name=crash /> The player-ninja can defend himself by jumping or ducking;<ref name=crash /> his only fighting moves are punching, kicking, and [[Flying kick|flying-kicking]].<ref name=yoursinclair /> The projectiles appear rapidly and can kill the player with one hit but can themselves be killed with one hit. The ground enemies on the other hand take between one and three hits to kill. The bosses at the end of each level—the Terrible Indian Cobra, the Highly Technical Triple Armed War Unit, Ivan Dragovich the Russian Master, and Zerwin the Wizard<ref name=crash />—can be killed with three hits.<ref name=sinclairuser />


==Development and reception==
==Development==
Michel Nass and Tommy Gardh of Tron Software began development of ''Oriental Hero'' in late 1986,<ref>{{cite book | last=Nass | first=Michel | author2=Tommy Gardh | date=1987 | url= | title=Oriental Hero | publisher=Firebird Software | at=Copyright screen}}</ref> shortly after the release of ''[[Ninja Master]]'', its prequel. It was published in 1987 by [[Firebird Software]] on their Silver budget label. The game supports both [[Sinclair Research|Sinclair]]'s and [[Kempston Micro Electronics]]'s joystick as controllers, as well as the cursor keys of the [[ZX Spectrum]]'s built-in keyboard.<ref name=crash /> Though the [[ZX Spectrum 128]] was out by the time of ''Oriental Hero''{{'s}} release, the game does not take advantage of that system's increased memory and supports the original 48-KB ZX Spectrum.<ref name=sinclairuser />
Michel Nass and Tommy Gardh of Tron Software, a Swedish video game development company,<ref name=nm>{{cite book | author=Tron Swedish Software | date=1986 | url= | title=Ninja Master | publisher=Firebird Software | at=Copyright screen}}</ref> began working on ''Oriental Hero'' in late 1986, shortly after the release of ''[[Ninja Master]]'', its predecessor. Nass was responsible for coding the game while Gardh produced the graphics and sound.<ref name=oh>{{cite book | last=Nass | first=Michel | author2=Tommy Gardh | date=1987 | url= | title=Oriental Hero | publisher=Firebird Software | at=Copyright screen}}</ref><ref name=crash /><ref name=acapital />


''Oriental Hero'' was published in July 1987 by [[Firebird Software]] on their Silver Range budget label.<ref>{{cite journal | last=Staff writer | date=31 July 1987 | url=https://spectrumcomputing.co.uk/page.php?issue_id=2969&page=45 | pages=41, 43, 45 | title=New Releases | journal=Popular Computing Weekly | publisher=Sunshine Publications | volume=6 | number=30 | via=Spectrum Computing}}</ref> It was one of the last of the games on the Silver Range before parent company [[Telecomsoft]] spun off the management of that label into its own subsidiary, [[Silverbird Software|Silverbird]], in late 1987.<ref>{{cite journal | last=Hewison | first=Richard | date=May 2004 | url=https://archive.org/details/RetroGamer_No1-No11/Retro%20Gamer%20%E2%84%9604/page/n46/ | title=Memories of Telecomsoft | journal=Retro Gamer | publisher=Future plc | volume= | issue=4 | pages=43–49 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref> The game supports both [[Sinclair Research|Sinclair]]'s and [[Kempston Micro Electronics]]'s joystick as controllers, as well as keyboard control through the [[ZX Spectrum]]'s built-in keyboard.<ref name=crash /> Though the [[ZX Spectrum 128]] was out by the time of ''Oriental Hero''{{'s}} release, the game does not take advantage of that system's increased memory and supports the original 48-KB ZX Spectrum.<ref name=sinclairuser />
Like its predecessor, ''Oriental Hero'' received mixed, mostly negative, reviews. A writer for the ''[[Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser]]'' called it a guilty pleasure—"a budget game which I know I shouldn't have enjoyed, but I did"—that provided "a few hours worth of fun". The writer praised the pixel art of the character sprites and felt the fighting mechanics worked "reasonably well" but called the command of movement "somewhat limited, and the [[Side-scrolling video game|side-scrolling]] "leav[ing] a bit to be desired". Despite the game's steep difficulty curve, the writer called the challenge addictive—"a couple of hours whisked by before I knew it"—with the challenge waning after a short while.<ref name=aca /> Tony Dillon of ''[[Sinclair User]]'' meanwhile gave it four stars out of ten, writing that the game "is all so fast ... winning starts becoming a matter of luck".<ref name=crash />

==Reception==
{{Video game reviews
| rev1=''[[Crash (magazine)|Crash]]''
| rev1Score=30% {{small|(average of 3 reviews)}}<ref name=crash />
| rev2=''[[Sinclair User]]''
| rev2Score={{rating|4|10}}<ref name=sinclairuser />
| rev3=''[[Your Sinclair]]''
| rev3Score={{rating|6|10}}<ref name=yoursinclair />
}}
Like its predecessor, ''Oriental Hero'' received mixed, mostly negative, reviews. A writer for the ''[[Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser]]'' called it a guilty pleasure—"a budget game which I know I shouldn't have enjoyed, but I did"—that provided "a few hours worth of fun". The writer praised the pixel art of the character sprites and felt the fighting mechanics worked "reasonably well" but called the command of movement "somewhat limited, and the [[Side-scrolling video game|side-scrolling]] "leav[ing] a bit to be desired". Despite the game's steep difficulty curve, the writer called the challenge addictive—"a couple of hours whisked by before I knew it"—with the challenge waning after a short while.<ref name=aca /> Tony Dillon of ''[[Sinclair User]]'' meanwhile gave it four stars out of ten, writing that the game "is all so fast ... winning starts becoming a matter of luck".<ref name=sinclairuser />


''[[Your Sinclair]]''{{'s}} Rick Robson deemed the game lacking imagination and found it had nothing to offer for advanced players of kung-fu games but praised the graphics and sound and surmised that it would do well in sales.<ref name=yoursinclair /> Nick Roberts, Ben Stone, and Paul Sumner, in a collective review for ''[[Crash (magazine)|Crash]]'', gave the game an average score of 30%. Stone wrote: "''Oriental Hero'' is so incredibly bad it's almost worth a look ... rubbish gameplay, poor graphics and no lasting appeal."<ref name=crash /> Like Robson, Roberts praised the graphics and sound but called the gameplay frustrating to the point of tears: "Wherever, whatever you do, you get killed before realising it. The terribly hard gameplay is a real shame, because otherwise ''Oriental Hero'' would be very addictive as kick-'em-ups go."<ref name=crash /> Sumner called the game "totally unplayable; the graphics are very badly animated, with uninvolving backgrounds. Firebird should know better".<ref name=crash /> The Portuguese newspaper ''[[A Capital]]'' called ''Oriental Hero'' a game to avoid and a black mark on the generally well-regarded catalog of Firebird, the game as a whole "add[ing] nothing to what is already known" and appearing glitchy, especially in the "bad animation" of the [[Sprite (computer graphics)|sprites]].<ref name=acapital />
''[[Your Sinclair]]''{{'s}} Rick Robson deemed the game lacking imagination and found it had nothing to offer for advanced players of kung-fu games but praised the graphics and sound and surmised that it would do well in sales.<ref name=yoursinclair /> Nick Roberts, Ben Stone, and Paul Sumner, in a collective review for ''[[Crash (magazine)|Crash]]'', gave the game an average score of 30%. They criticized the game for its "rubbish" gameplay, "poor" graphics and not having lasting appeal.<ref name=crash /> Like Robson, Roberts praised the graphics and sound but called the gameplay frustrating.<ref name=crash /> Sumner called the game "totally unplayable; the graphics are very badly animated, with uninvolving backgrounds. Firebird should know better".<ref name=crash /> The Portuguese newspaper ''[[A Capital]]'' called ''Oriental Hero'' a game to avoid and a black mark on the generally well-regarded catalog of Firebird, the game as a whole "add[ing] nothing to what is already known" and appearing glitchy, especially in the "bad animation" of the [[Sprite (computer graphics)|sprites]].<ref name=acapital />


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|refs=
{{reflist|colwidth=30em|refs=
<ref name=aca>{{cite journal | last= | first= | date=7 August 1987 | url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/809151404/ | title=The World of Computers | work=Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser | publisher= | volume= | issue= | page=25 | via=Newspapers.com}}</ref>
<ref name=aca>{{cite journal | last= | first= | date=7 August 1987 | url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/116128401/the-world-of-computers/ | title=The World of Computers | journal=Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser | volume= | issue= | page=25 | via=Newspapers.com}}</ref>
<ref name=yoursinclair>{{cite journal | last=Robson | first=Rick | date=October 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/Your_Sinclair_022/page/74/ | title=''Oriental Hero'' | work=Your Sinclair | publisher=Dennis Publishing | issue=22 | page=74 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
<ref name=yoursinclair>{{cite journal | last=Robson | first=Rick | date=October 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/Your_Sinclair_022/page/74/ | title=''Oriental Hero'' | journal=Your Sinclair | publisher=Dennis Publishing | issue=22 | page=74 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
<ref name=sinclairuser>{{cite journal | last=Dillon | first=Tony | date=September 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/sinclair-user-magazine-066/page/n27/ | title=Twilight Zone | work=Sinclair User | publisher=EMAP | issue=66 | page=25 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
<ref name=sinclairuser>{{cite journal | last=Dillon | first=Tony | date=September 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/sinclair-user-magazine-066/page/n27/ | title=Twilight Zone | journal=Sinclair User | publisher=EMAP | issue=66 | page=25 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
<ref name=crash>{{cite journal | last1=Stone | first1=Ben | author2=Nick Roberts | author3=Paul Sumner | date=September 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/crash-magazine-44/page/n17/ | title=''Oriental Hero'' | work=Crash | publisher=Newsfield Publications | issue=44 | page=18 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
<ref name=crash>{{cite journal | last1=Stone | first1=Ben | author2=Nick Roberts | author3=Paul Sumner | date=September 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/crash-magazine-44/page/n17/ | title=''Oriental Hero'' | journal=Crash | publisher=Newsfield Publications | issue=44 | page=18 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
<ref name=acapital>{{cite journal | last=Staff writer | date=9 October 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/a-capital-videojogos/A_Capital_1987.10.09/ | title=Artes Marciais Falhadas | trans-title=Failed Martial Arts | work=A Capital | page=55 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
<ref name=acapital>{{cite journal | last=Staff writer | date=9 October 1987 | url=https://archive.org/details/a-capital-videojogos/A_Capital_1987.10.09/ | title=Artes Marciais Falhadas | trans-title=Failed Martial Arts | journal=A Capital | language=Portuguese | page=55 | via=the Internet Archive}}</ref>
}}
}}


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* {{Internet Archive game|zx_Oriental_Hero_1987_Firebird_Software}}
* {{Internet Archive game|zx_Oriental_Hero_1987_Firebird_Software}}
* {{MobyGames|/oriental-hero}}
* {{MobyGames|/oriental-hero}}
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jnrDI_Bn3rA ''Terrible Old Games You've Probably Never Heard Of&nbsp;– Oriental Hero''] by [[Stuart Ashen]] on [[YouTube]]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jnrDI_Bn3rA ''Terrible Old Games You've Probably Never Heard Of – Oriental Hero''] by [[Stuart Ashen]] on [[YouTube]]


[[Category:1987 video games]]
[[Category:1987 video games]]
[[Category:Platform fighters]]
[[Category:Side-scrolling beat 'em ups]]
[[Category:Single-player video games]]
[[Category:Telecomsoft games]]
[[Category:Video games about ninja]]
[[Category:Video games about ninja]]
[[Category:Video games developed in Sweden]]
[[Category:ZX Spectrum games]]
[[Category:ZX Spectrum-only games]]
[[Category:ZX Spectrum-only games]]

Latest revision as of 22:54, 24 July 2024

Oriental Hero
Developer(s)Tron Software
Publisher(s)Firebird Software
Designer(s)Michel Nass
Tommy Gardh
Programmer(s)Tommy Gardh
Artist(s)Michel Nass
Composer(s)Michel Nass
Platform(s)ZX Spectrum
ReleaseJuly 1987 (1987-07)
Genre(s)Beat 'em up

Oriental Hero is a ninja-themed side-scrolling beat-'em-up video game published in 1987 exclusively for the ZX Spectrum under the Firebird Software Silver Range label. It was developed by Tron Software as the sequel to their 1986 multi-platform release, Ninja Master.

Gameplay and plot

[edit]
The player ninja on the road to Zerwin. Enemies scroll into view from the left and the right.[1]

Oriental Hero centers on the ninja protagonist, who after achieving victory in the previous game Ninja Master travels on the road leading to the palace of Zerwin the Wizard, who the protagonist must eventually defeat in order to win the title of Supreme Oriental Combat Master.[2]

The game comprises four levels, each a horizontally scrolling platform on which the player-ninja must fight several ground and flying enemies and projectiles before reaching the boss at the end of the level.[2] The player-ninja can defend himself by jumping or ducking;[2] his only fighting moves are punching, kicking, and flying-kicking.[1] The projectiles appear rapidly and can kill the player with one hit but can themselves be killed with one hit. The ground enemies on the other hand take between one and three hits to kill. The bosses at the end of each level—the Terrible Indian Cobra, the Highly Technical Triple Armed War Unit, Ivan Dragovich the Russian Master, and Zerwin the Wizard[2]—can be killed with three hits.[3]

Development

[edit]

Michel Nass and Tommy Gardh of Tron Software, a Swedish video game development company,[4] began working on Oriental Hero in late 1986, shortly after the release of Ninja Master, its predecessor. Nass was responsible for coding the game while Gardh produced the graphics and sound.[5][2][6]

Oriental Hero was published in July 1987 by Firebird Software on their Silver Range budget label.[7] It was one of the last of the games on the Silver Range before parent company Telecomsoft spun off the management of that label into its own subsidiary, Silverbird, in late 1987.[8] The game supports both Sinclair's and Kempston Micro Electronics's joystick as controllers, as well as keyboard control through the ZX Spectrum's built-in keyboard.[2] Though the ZX Spectrum 128 was out by the time of Oriental Hero's release, the game does not take advantage of that system's increased memory and supports the original 48-KB ZX Spectrum.[3]

Reception

[edit]

Like its predecessor, Oriental Hero received mixed, mostly negative, reviews. A writer for the Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser called it a guilty pleasure—"a budget game which I know I shouldn't have enjoyed, but I did"—that provided "a few hours worth of fun". The writer praised the pixel art of the character sprites and felt the fighting mechanics worked "reasonably well" but called the command of movement "somewhat limited, and the side-scrolling "leav[ing] a bit to be desired". Despite the game's steep difficulty curve, the writer called the challenge addictive—"a couple of hours whisked by before I knew it"—with the challenge waning after a short while.[9] Tony Dillon of Sinclair User meanwhile gave it four stars out of ten, writing that the game "is all so fast ... winning starts becoming a matter of luck".[3]

Your Sinclair's Rick Robson deemed the game lacking imagination and found it had nothing to offer for advanced players of kung-fu games but praised the graphics and sound and surmised that it would do well in sales.[1] Nick Roberts, Ben Stone, and Paul Sumner, in a collective review for Crash, gave the game an average score of 30%. They criticized the game for its "rubbish" gameplay, "poor" graphics and not having lasting appeal.[2] Like Robson, Roberts praised the graphics and sound but called the gameplay frustrating.[2] Sumner called the game "totally unplayable; the graphics are very badly animated, with uninvolving backgrounds. Firebird should know better".[2] The Portuguese newspaper A Capital called Oriental Hero a game to avoid and a black mark on the generally well-regarded catalog of Firebird, the game as a whole "add[ing] nothing to what is already known" and appearing glitchy, especially in the "bad animation" of the sprites.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Robson, Rick (October 1987). "Oriental Hero". Your Sinclair (22). Dennis Publishing: 74 – via the Internet Archive.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Stone, Ben; Nick Roberts; Paul Sumner (September 1987). "Oriental Hero". Crash (44). Newsfield Publications: 18 – via the Internet Archive.
  3. ^ a b c d Dillon, Tony (September 1987). "Twilight Zone". Sinclair User (66). EMAP: 25 – via the Internet Archive.
  4. ^ Tron Swedish Software (1986). Ninja Master. Firebird Software. Copyright screen.
  5. ^ Nass, Michel; Tommy Gardh (1987). Oriental Hero. Firebird Software. Copyright screen.
  6. ^ a b Staff writer (9 October 1987). "Artes Marciais Falhadas" [Failed Martial Arts]. A Capital (in Portuguese): 55 – via the Internet Archive.
  7. ^ Staff writer (31 July 1987). "New Releases". Popular Computing Weekly. 6 (30). Sunshine Publications: 41, 43, 45 – via Spectrum Computing.
  8. ^ Hewison, Richard (May 2004). "Memories of Telecomsoft". Retro Gamer (4). Future plc: 43–49 – via the Internet Archive.
  9. ^ "The World of Computers". Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser: 25. 7 August 1987 – via Newspapers.com.
[edit]