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|developer=[[Westone Bit Entertainment]]<br>Agenda Co., Ltd
|developer=[[Westone Bit Entertainment]]<br>Agenda Co., Ltd
|publisher=[[Hudson Soft]]
|publisher=[[Hudson Soft]]
|released={{vgrelease|JP|1992|NA|February 26, 1993}}
|released={{vgrelease|JP|February 26, 1993|NA|February 1993}}
|genre=[[Beat 'em up]] [[action game|action]]
|genre=[[Beat 'em up]] [[action game|action]]
|modes=[[Single-player video game|Single-player]]
|modes=[[Single-player video game|Single-player]]

Revision as of 16:46, 20 May 2020

Riot Zone
Developer(s)Westone Bit Entertainment
Agenda Co., Ltd
Publisher(s)Hudson Soft
Platform(s)TurboGrafx-CD, Virtual Console
Release
  • JP: February 26, 1993
  • NA: February 1993
Genre(s)Beat 'em up action
Mode(s)Single-player

Riot Zone, known in Japan as Ōkami-teki Monshō - Crest of Wolf (狼的紋章 クレスト・オブ・ウルフ), is a 1992, beat 'em up video game by Hudson Soft for the TurboGrafx-CD console. It was re-released on the Virtual Console for North America on January 14, 2008,[1] in the PAL regions on January 18, 2008, and in Japan on April 1, 2008.

History

Westone Bit Entertainment had a licensing arrangement whereby it owned the rights to the Japan-exclusive 1991 beat 'em up arcade game, Riot City, but Sega retained rights to the main characters, bosses, and names. Because of this, WestOne teamed up with Japanese video game developer Agenda Co., Ltd to produce a revamped version of the game for the TurboGrafx-CD, under a new license.

To get around the licensing issue, Hudson Soft simply had the graphics of the main characters and the title changed. The result was Riot Zone, which instead of featuring Paul and Bobby, featured characters known as Hawk and Tony, who bore a striking resemblance to Paul and Bobby, albeit with different outfits. The game was nearly identical to Riot City in gameplay, but with a few differences. In this arrangement, Hudson Soft retained the rights to the characters and name, allowing the company to continue to produce future games using the Riot Zone name and characters, or plan re-releases.

Plot

In the beginning, the setting takes place in New York City where two men known as Hawk Takezaki and Tony Aldus met up with their chief Jim Hyde, and told him that they finally forced a villain known as Bossman to stay in a place called the DragonZone. The chief advised Hawk not to enter the DragonZone and head back home, but Hawk refused to do so. Before he immediately began traveling toward DragonZone and try to demolish it, in order to save a girl name Candy, Tony told Hawk that he will join him.

Gameplay

Like Riot City, Riot Zone resembles Capcom's 1989 arcade hit, Final Fight, which is an archetypal side scrolling beat-em-up game. Players choose between two characters: Hawk, the blond-haired vigilante who has average statistics, and Tony, who is strong, but slow and has a break-dancing move. Player controls the chosen character from left to right through each level (most of which are split into three or more scenes), fighting with the enemy characters who appear, until they reach a confrontation with a stronger boss character at the end of the level. Once that boss is beaten, the player automatically moves on to the next stage. Enemies appear from both sides of the screen, and the player must defeat all of them to progress. If the player tries to simply travel through the levels without fighting, the screen will stop scrolling until all current enemies have been defeated, before allowing the player to continue progress. Enemies may move outside the confines of the screen, but players may not. Unlike Final Fight, there are no weapons to pick up along the way, but the player will only pick up items for points and health. Unlike Riot City, Riot Zone lacks multiplayer and instead of chiptune music, the TurboGrafx-CD allows it to play high-quality CD-DA music.

References