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By performing well during stages, the player can unlock special attacks such as machine guns or rockets launched from the [[coffin]] on Beyond the Grave's back. These can be used by charging the beat meter which is represented by a skull on the top left corner of the game's heads-up display. To build the beat meter, Beyond the Grave must perform combos sometimes numbering in hundreds of hits (destroying enemies or practically anything in the game environment). Strategy is required in setting up combos that are as long and devastating as possible, which helps to carry on the over-the-top action of the game.<ref>{{cite web |last=Laidlaw |first=Mike |date=October 26, 2002 |title=PlayStation 2 Review: GunGrave |url=http://www.adrenalinevault.com/consoles/reviews/ps2/review_temp.asp?game=ggrave |website=The Adrenaline Vault |publisher=NewWorld.com |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060216022530/http://www.adrenalinevault.com/consoles/reviews/ps2/review_temp.asp?game=ggrave |archive-date=February 16, 2006}}</ref> |
By performing well during stages, the player can unlock special attacks such as machine guns or rockets launched from the [[coffin]] on Beyond the Grave's back. These can be used by charging the beat meter which is represented by a skull on the top left corner of the game's heads-up display. To build the beat meter, Beyond the Grave must perform combos sometimes numbering in hundreds of hits (destroying enemies or practically anything in the game environment). Strategy is required in setting up combos that are as long and devastating as possible, which helps to carry on the over-the-top action of the game.<ref>{{cite web |last=Laidlaw |first=Mike |date=October 26, 2002 |title=PlayStation 2 Review: GunGrave |url=http://www.adrenalinevault.com/consoles/reviews/ps2/review_temp.asp?game=ggrave |website=The Adrenaline Vault |publisher=NewWorld.com |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060216022530/http://www.adrenalinevault.com/consoles/reviews/ps2/review_temp.asp?game=ggrave |archive-date=February 16, 2006}}</ref> |
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Stages and some important events within stages are separated by anime |
Stages and some important events within stages are separated by anime cutscenes featuring art by Nightow. This is where the game's story takes place. Characters are expanded on and the player is given a [[Backstory|back-story]] that is not obvious through gameplay alone. |
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===Weapons=== |
===Weapons=== |
Revision as of 10:55, 3 April 2021
Gungrave | |
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Developer(s) | Red Entertainment |
Publisher(s) |
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Designer(s) | Naohito Hanai Tomohiro Maruyama Hidenori Tanaka Ken-ichi Iwaida Takashi Hata Masaaki Karube |
Programmer(s) | Naohito Hanai |
Artist(s) | Yasuhiro Nightow (character design) |
Composer(s) | Tsuneo Imahori |
Platform(s) | PlayStation 2 |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Third-person shooter |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Gungrave (ガングレイヴ, Gangureivu) is a third-person shooter video game developed and published by Red Entertainment (Sega in North America and Activision in Europe) for the PlayStation 2. Gungrave follows its main character through a variety of stages on a path of revenge.
While the game play received moderate reviews, Gungrave received acclaim for the character designs provided by series creator Yasuhiro Nightow (Trigun) and mechanical designs provided by Kōsuke Fujishima (Oh My Goddess! series, You're Under Arrest series, Sakura Wars series). Both artist's respective styles helped give the game a distinct feel, which (along with fan support) helped Gungrave translate from a video game to an anime series as well as a video game sequel for the PlayStation 2 entitled Gungrave: Overdose in 2004. Cinematics were provided by Ikusabune Co., Ltd., which developed the sequel with Red Entertainment's supervision.
Gameplay
As a third-person shooter, Gungrave focuses entirely on combat and forgoes the puzzle solving aspects of some of its forebears. The player advances through hallway-like stages, but has a free range of motion in these areas. The player confronts wave after wave of fighters en route to an end-level boss. Combat varies between gunplay with enemies at a distance and simple melee combat at close range, and the game rates the amount of flair the player uses to destroy everyone and everything in sight.[2]
Beyond the Grave is equipped with a damage-absorbing energy shield that can absorb a large amount of damage in addition to his life bar. This shield appears as a blue bar alongside Beyond the Grave's life bar in the game's heads-up display. When the shield is fully depleted, the player is highly vulnerable and further damage reduces the character's health level rapidly. However, the shield will recharge fully if no damage is sustained for a brief period of time.[3]
By performing well during stages, the player can unlock special attacks such as machine guns or rockets launched from the coffin on Beyond the Grave's back. These can be used by charging the beat meter which is represented by a skull on the top left corner of the game's heads-up display. To build the beat meter, Beyond the Grave must perform combos sometimes numbering in hundreds of hits (destroying enemies or practically anything in the game environment). Strategy is required in setting up combos that are as long and devastating as possible, which helps to carry on the over-the-top action of the game.[4]
Stages and some important events within stages are separated by anime cutscenes featuring art by Nightow. This is where the game's story takes place. Characters are expanded on and the player is given a back-story that is not obvious through gameplay alone.
Weapons
Cerberus — Beyond the Grave's twin handguns, named for the three-headed hound of Hades. Grave has an unlimited amount of ammo with these, and never has to reload. If the player allows Grave to stand still during a fight, he will begin to target and shoot every available target on screen without looking.
Coffin —Beyond the Grave carries a tremendous (though technically small, as it is not the size to hold a body) metal coffin on his back which contains a variety of weapons that can be only used as special attacks. Grave can also use the coffin to strike nearby enemies, and if timed correctly deflect projectiles fired from a distance, destroying the enemy that fired them. The manner in which Grave carries and uses the coffin bears a strong resemblance to the cross carried by the wandering priest Wolfwood in Nightow's manga series, Trigun. It is also directly inspired by the 1966 movie Django in which the main character carries a coffin with a Gatling gun inside[citation needed]. The Coffin contains all of the same weapons as the trio of Mariachi in Desperado, which Grave (at the beginning of each mission) retrieves his handguns from like El, has a missile launcher (in which he strikes the same pose when firing as the Quino) and the Gatling/machine gun that Campa held.
Demolition Shots — Special attacks performed using the coffin that consume levels from the Beat Meter. They can help the player get through sticky situations. These attacks exemplify the over-the-top style for which the creators are known. There are four offensive techniques in all, along with the option of regaining health using the beat meter. The first offensive technique is available at the start of the game, and the other three are unlockable through good performance during stages.[citation needed]
- Death Blow — Beyond the Grave fires a single rocket that explodes and kills every enemy within the immediate vicinity of the point of impact.
- Bullet Dance — Beyond the Grave releases a machine gun from the coffin, and spins in a 360° circle, destroying everything around him.
- Hellhound Roar — Beyond the Grave launches three rockets ahead of him. The attack has a greater explosive range than Death Blow and causes greater damage.
- Raging Inferno — Beyond the Grave spins in a circle and fires his machine gun, and follows up by jumping into the air and doing it again.
Graveyard Special — Starting with Bob Poundmax in stage three, when a boss is near death, the skull at the top of the screen begins to glow and the player is given the option to perform a special fatality demolition shot. These usually break away from the fight for a special animation of Grave launching an extravagant attack. This consumes a demolition shot and can be performed only against a boss's final form. Each successive use of these techniques performs a different attack which build off the previous one.
Plot and setting
The game takes place in an unknown city that is controlled by the Millennion organization. The city is overrun by crime and a mysterious drug known as seed. The story follows Grave as he sets out on a course for revenge against the man who killed him, his former best friend and colleague from Millenion, Harry Macdowell.
Stages in the game are presented as missions issued by Dr. T, and follow Grave as he hunts down the boss of that stage. Settings include a bar, a lab, the subway, and even a traditional Japanese dojo set atop a sky scraper. These environments are complemented or contrasted by the urban environment that surrounds them.
Story
The game opens with the young girl dragging an oversized attaché case toward a warehouse with difficulty. "Bloody" Harry Macdowell has just carried out a coup against Big Daddy, the leader of the Millennion organization, and his daughter Mika needs to find someone that can protect her and stop Harry's mad plans. The occupants of this warehouse include a kindly looking old doctor, and a man with a notable scar on his face. Mika arrives, and the man with the scar claims the contents of the case: two massive handguns. That man is revealed to be the game's title character Grave, and now that he is armed he can start his mission.
Gungrave first approaches its stages as a series of missions issued by Dr. T, first to gather information on the current makeup of Millennion from a low-level street gang, and next destroying a research facility that creates Harry's undead soldiers. In the third stage, while attempting to pump information from an informant, Grave comes into contact with the leadership of the Millenion organization—once friends and allies that he now faces as enemies. Each have used the research Harry supported to give themselves inhuman powers. From here on, Grave is hounded by each member as he makes his way to Harry's tower at the heart of the city.
As the player progresses, the game uses anime cutscenes to reflect on the history of young Brandon and Harry, gradually bringing the pair's back story into focus. Close friends, the two had both become lieutenants in the Millennion organization, working directly under Big Daddy, the group's leader. Brandon shared a bond with Big Daddy and some flashbacks show the two sharing more of a father-son relationship. Brandon even let Big Daddy marry the woman he loved so that she could find a better life, but the two remained close. Not content with the power he had been given, Harry asked Brandon to help him kill Big Daddy so that he could take over. When Brandon refused, Harry shot his friend in the left eye, killing him. Fifteen years later, Harry carried out his coup. His actions as leader inspired Dr. T to revive Brandon who was the only person capable of stopping Harry. Dr. T's connection to all of this is not made clear, but he often makes comments that indicate some connection to Brandon's former life.
Grave picks apart the leadership of Millennion to make his way to Harry. At the top of the tower that Harry uses as a headquarters, it is revealed that Big Daddy still lives in the form of a twisted monster. Harry forces Grave to fight his creation, and following the final battle, Harry accepts his defeat graciously and allows his friend to kill him.
With Harry defeated, Mika's protection becomes Grave's only concern, and to keep his promise to Big Daddy of protecting the family, Grave protects Mika while they drive away from this tragedy.
Characters
Beyond The Grave
Formerly Brandon Heat, Grave was once a high ranking and trusted member of the Millennion leadership. Gungrave opens shortly after his resurrection, fifteen years after his death. Throughout the game Grave's past is told through the use of flashbacks in the form of anime cutscenes as Grave recovers his memories. Grave is a silent protagonist, receiving his mission and carrying it out without a word. As a result of his transformation into an undead soldier, his body must be sustained by periodic blood transfusions or else he becomes weak and his body will collapse.
Grave has an important trait that makes him stand out from other models of Deadmen from his generation: he possesses a sense of self and will of his own. He also retains a small portion of his memories as a human, which he regains over the span of the game.
Brandon entered the organization with his friend Harry and both shared a strong bond from their childhood. While a member of Millennion, Brandon also shared a bond with Big Daddy, looking up to him as a father. Eventually, Brandon was forced to choose between supporting Harry in a coup or protecting the group's leader; he is killed for deciding not to side with his friend.
Allies
Dr. T - Voiced by: Motomu Kiyokawa
The kindly yet enigmatic Dr. T is Grave's main source of support throughout the game. He both provides Grave with information that he acquires through his own channels and provides Grave with treatments that sustains his body. The doctor has a connection to Brandon from his time in Millennion and has his own reasons for wanting to see the group see its end. The doctor's connection is that he was the lead researcher for Harry's undead soldier program. During the intermission sequences, the player can choose to let Dr. T talk and provide some information about the upcoming stage and reflect on the past until his death while Grave is in the middle of a blood transfusion.
Mika Asagi - Voiced by: Tomoko Kawakami
The thirteen-year-old daughter of Grave's former love, Maria and Big Daddy. Mika seeks out Grave for protection after her parents' deaths and provides Grave with his guns so that he can set out. During the intermission sequences of the game, the player can choose to let Mika talk about current events and things that her mother told her about Brandon and Millennion. After the death of Dr. T, Mika picks up where he left off and attempts to support Grave over a two way radio.
Mika trusts Grave completely, regarding him as the only family she has left.
Over the course of the game it comes to light as to why this girl is someone precious and important to Grave—a promise between Maria and him (when he was still Brandon) to look after and protect her child, one of the few memories Grave retains of his past life.
Millennion
Maria Asagi - Voiced by: Kikuko Inoue
Maria was Brandon's sweetheart when they were young. She is also Mika's mother. After his entrance into Millennion, Brandon rejected her so that she would go to Big Daddy and be provided for. The two still remained close, and she took care of the Cerberus after Brandon's murder. She told her daughter that if there was ever a grave situation where her life was in danger, she should seek out the man that can use them for protection. The game opens after her death.
Harry McDowell - Voiced by: Tsutomu Isobe
Harry is the ruthless head of Millennion, and was Brandon's childhood friend. Harry kills Brandon just before he launches his coup of Millennion. He is the only Millenion leader to not have a transformation, and is not fought as a boss.
Bob Poundmax - Voiced by: Chafurin
This extremely heavy-set and boorish man is the first member of the Millennion leadership to challenge Grave. His first reaction to seeing Grave is to berate him for the ingratitude he now shows towards the group he once dedicated his life to (ignoring that this is also how he met his demise). In his second form, Bob resembles Baron Vladimir Harkonnen from the original 1984 Dune film.
- Initially Bob attacks Grave with a sub-machine gun, and four dark-suited enemies attack alongside him. He proves more agile than one would assume, jumping and using his size as a weapon. 'Killing' him causes him to shift to overkill mode.
- After his first encounter with Bob, Grave runs outside to see a helicopter take off with Harry inside it. However, the transformed Bob Poundmax blocks his path, offended that Grave would forget about him. Bob now uses a special suit to help him float and again uses his girth to try to crush Grave. He is easily dispatched and finished off with a variation on the Hellhound Roar.
Balladbird Lee Voiced by: Masaya Onosaka
Grave's second opponent, Lee is responsible for killing Dr. T and kidnapping Mika in order to lure Grave into a trap. His primary concern seems to be avenging Bob Poundmax. Initially, Lee appears to be an Asian male wearing clothes that are Manchu Qipao in style. His overkill mode resembles the Violator from Todd McFarlane's Spawn.
- While pursuing Mika's kidnappers, Grave finds and boards a train. The train immediately starts to move, and Grave fights from car to car, eventually fighting a helicopter that attacks from outside. After Grave destroys the helicopter, Lee opens the door and states that he does not believe that Grave could have killed Bob and that he will avenge his friend. He then throws Mika out the door, and the train crashes.
- In the wreckage of the train, the transformed Lee assaults Grave in the debris of the crash. During the fight, Bunji Kugashira watches from the sidelines, having saved Mika from her fall. Grave finishes Lee with a modified Bullet Dance. After this fight, Mika passes on the ominous message that his next opponent will meet Grave at "the tower".
Bear Walken - Voiced by: Ryūzaburō Ōtomo
Grave's third opponent, Bear Walken, resides in a dojo built on the roof of an office building. Bear is an older man and solidly built. After Grave reaches the top, the serene atmosphere belies the fight that is to come. He transforms into his first attack form and levels everything on the rooftop immediately after greeting Grave.
- In contrast to the noble kimono he wore moments before the battle, Walken now has several arms, each fitted with a different weapon (machine guns, rocket launchers, and flamethrowers). The dojo has been completely destroyed and the fight takes place on the now flat roof of the office building where the stage took place.
- When you disarm Walken, he transforms again. In this new form, Walken has one massive and one small arm. He throws debris, smashes the ground, and lunges at Grave. When he is close to death, Grave defeats him with a modified Deathblow. Immediately following Walken's defeat, the top portion of the tower is destroyed and Bunji Kugashira appears, telling Grave to recover his memory more quickly. Grave falls to the ground and finds himself standing before a long-forgotten cathedral.
Bunji Kugashira - Voiced by: Fumihiko Tachiki
Once Grave's student and trusted friend, Bunji became Harry's second-in-command in Grave's absence. Bunji is extremely similar to Grave, right down to fighting style. He wants nothing more than to duel with his rival. Physically, he bears a passing resemblance to Nicholas D. Wolfwood. Bunji does not transform into Overkill Mode like the three bosses before him, but does not need to (it's said that he is always in overkill mode, just that his body doesn't change).
- Bunji has several attacks, including his own powerful handguns, a kick to avoid close-range combat, and his own Graveyard Special. He can also regenerate health if he is given a chance to rest. Grave finishes the fight with an improvised Raging Inferno. Bunji is left against a wall of the cathedral with a cigarette in his mouth. He thanks Grave for defeating him, wishes him luck, and comments that he wishes things could go back to the way they used to be. As his cigarette dies, his body begins to dissolve until there is no trace left.
Big Daddy - Voiced by: Iemasa Kayumi
Once the leader of Millennion, Gungrave starts shortly after the coup that ended his reign. Big Daddy is shown scarcely through cut scenes, but it is apparent that he was close to Brandon. He helped to raise Maria, and the two were eventually wed. In a cutscene, he says that he has achieved all that he had ever wanted to, and now wants to enjoy his success with his wife and unborn daughter.
- While the player is led to believe that Big Daddy had been killed before the start of the game, Harry had more sinister plans for him. Using the technology that created his undead soldiers, Harry turned Big Daddy into a mutant, who was held at the top of his tower. When Grave confronts Harry, he is captured by this creature, who pursues him through an endless tunnel. Grave shoots it while keeping out of its reach, and eventually performs a Hellhound Roar/Deathblow combo to finish him.
- After his defeat, a larger creature, known as Alien Head, devours Big Daddy's body and attempts to do the same to Grave. After the fight, Grave pulls out all the stops and uses each of his four special attacks in his final Graveyard Special.
Development
The game was inspired by multiple action films most notably John Woo's. The gameplay was developed in order to be unique rather than a typical action game.[5] Character designer Nightow was attending a convention in America and was approached by Red Entertainment during conception of the game which highly influenced their title.[6]
Sequel
Two years after Gungrave: Overdose, adds new playable characters to the series and a new story.
In 2017, Korean developers Iggymob and Blueside, under the supervision of Red Entertainment, revived the Gungrave series and released Gungrave VR for the PlayStation VR in late 2017 in Japan and late 2018 in North America and Europe. Gungrave VR serves as a prologue to a new sequel titled, Gungrave G.O.R.E. Gunslinger Of REsurrection, which is in development for the PlayStation 4.[7]
Reception
Aggregator | Score |
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Metacritic | 65/100[8] |
Publication | Score |
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Edge | 5/10[9] |
Electronic Gaming Monthly | 6.83/10[10] |
Eurogamer | 4/10[11] |
Famitsu | 30/40[12] |
Game Informer | 7/10[13] |
GamePro | [14] |
GameRevolution | D+[15] |
GameSpot | 5.1/10[16] |
GameSpy | [17] |
GameZone | 7.6/10[18] |
IGN | (US) 8/10[3] (JP) 5/10[19] |
Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine | [20] |
Entertainment Weekly | A−[21] |
Playboy | 65%[22] |
The game received "mixed" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic,[8] due in most part to its short length and minimal replay value. The anime stylings of creators Yasuhiro Nightow (of Trigun fame) and Kōsuke Fujishima (of Oh My Goddess! and You're Under Arrest fame) gave the game a very distinct and unique look and feel that impressed many critics.[citation needed]
References
- ^ http://mediaarts-db.jp/gm/syosai.php?id=392113900623&kbn=c12
- ^ Smith, David (July 15, 2002). "Gungrave Hands-On". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ a b Smith, David (September 13, 2002). "Gungrave Review". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Laidlaw, Mike (October 26, 2002). "PlayStation 2 Review: GunGrave". The Adrenaline Vault. NewWorld.com. Archived from the original on February 16, 2006. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
- ^ "Exclusive interview with Toru Kubo of RED Entertainment". Games Are Fun. Archived from the original on December 11, 2002. Retrieved February 12, 2020.
- ^ "Anime Expo 2009: interview with Yasuhiro Nightow and Satoshi Nishimura". UCLA. Retrieved February 12, 2020.
- ^ Luster, Joseph (December 15, 2017). ""Gungrave VR" Paves Way for Brand New PS4 Game". Crunchyroll. Otter Media. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
- ^ a b "Gungrave for PlayStation 2 Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Edge staff (October 2002). "Gungrave". Edge. No. 115. Future plc.
- ^ EGM staff (October 2002). "Gungrave". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 159. Ziff Davis. p. 179. Archived from the original on March 30, 2004. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Reed, Kristan (December 6, 2002). "Gungrave". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ "プレイステーション2 - ガングレイヴ". Famitsu (in Japanese). Vol. 915. Enterbrain. June 30, 2006. p. 93.
- ^ "Gungrave". Game Informer. No. 114. GameStop. October 2002. p. 85.
- ^ Major Mike (September 18, 2002). "Gungrave Review for PS2 on GamePro.com". GamePro. IDG Entertainment. Archived from the original on February 4, 2005. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Gee, Brian (October 2002). "Gungrave Review". Game Revolution. CraveOnline. Archived from the original on September 22, 2015. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Kasavin, Greg (September 17, 2002). "Gungrave Review". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Nam, Michael J. (October 18, 2002). "GameSpy: Gungrave". GameSpy. Ziff Davis. Retrieved January 17, 2007.
- ^ Watkins, Rob (October 10, 2002). "Gungrave Review". GameZone. Archived from the original on September 29, 2008. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Smith, David (August 8, 2002). "Gungrave Import Review". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ "Gungrave". Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine. Ziff Davis. October 2002. p. 147.
- ^ Walk, Gary Eng (October 11, 2002). "GUNGRAVE". Entertainment Weekly. No. 677. Time Inc. p. 86. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- ^ Steinberg, Scott (October 2, 2002). "Gungrave". Playboy. Playboy Enterprises. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
- Johnston, Chris. "Gungrave Archives". (January 2007) Newtype USA. Volume 6, Number 1, page 145.
External links
Game Information
- Gungrave.com, Official Japanese website
- Gungrave at MobyGames
Music Information
- GUNGRAVE OST UNO "RIGHTHEAD" at MusicBrainz (list of releases)
- GUNGRAVE OST 2 "LEFTHEAD" at MusicBrainz (list of releases)
Anime Information
- Gungrave (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia