Home Games Road Blaster

Road Blaster

PLATFORM

3DO MSX Multiplatform Q48493 Sega Genesis

GENRE

Interactive movie, vehicular combat

SCORE

78
"
✒️

Gamer24h Editor's Take

Road Blaster caught our attention with its unique design and has shaped up to be a must-play masterpiece candidate thanks to the depth of its experience. The visionary approach of developer Telenet Japan, Wolf Team <small>(Mega-CD)</small>, Ecseco Development <small>(Saturn/PS1)</small>, Revolutionary Concepts <small>(iOS)</small>, combined with the expertise of publisher Ecseco Development <small>(Saturn/PS1)</small>, has resulted in an exceptionally refined product. Its innovative take on the Interactive movie, vehicular combat genre offers a breath of fresh air for fans of the category. With an overall score of 78, it delivers an enjoyable experience well above average. If you're looking for an absorbing world and satisfying mechanics that pull you right in, this game might be exactly what you've been searching for.

Road Blaster (ロードブラスター) is an interactive film game developed by Data East, featuring animation by Toei Animation, originally released in Japan as a LaserDisc-based arcade video game in 1985. The player assumes the role of a vigilante who pursues a biker gang responsible for his wife’s death in a modified sports car. The game was ported home formats such as the MSX and Sharp X1 (VHD format), Sega CD (under the title of Road Blaster FX), LaserActive (in Mega-LD format), PlayStation and Saturn (in a compilation with Thunder Storm). The Sega CD and Mega-LD versions were released outside of Japan under titles of Road Avenger and Road Prosecutor.

⭐ Review Scores

GameRankings Icon GameRankings
Sega CD: 90
Metacritic Icon Metacritic
iOS: 78
PUB Dragon
Sega CD: 4/5
Famitsu Icon Famitsu
Mega CD: 32 / 40 <br> Saturn: 25 / 40 <br> PS1: 23 / 40
PUB GameFan
Sega CD: 383 / 400
PUB GamePro
Sega CD: 5 / 5
IGN Icon IGN
iOS: 8 / 10

Gameplay

As with other laserdisc-based arcade games from the same time, the gameplay consists of on-screen instructions overlaid over pre-recorded full motion video animated footage of high-speed chases and vehicular combat. Played from a first-person perspective, the player controls the crosshair to steer their car toward the correct directions according to the green arrows flashing and beeping beside it, while controlling the gas pedal, brake and booster whenever they light up.

The game has nine stages. Upon successfully completing a level, the player is graded on the reaction time. Different difficulty levels can be selected. In Normal Mode, pop-up icons and audio tones signal when to turn left or right, brake, hit turbo, or hit other cars. In Hard Mode, there are no on-screen icons to guide the player.

Plot

Road Blaster is inspired by revenge thriller films such as Mad Max. In the late 1990s United States, the player assumes the role of a vigilante who drives a customized sports car in order to get revenge on a biker gang responsible for his wife’s death on their honeymoon. After recovering from his own injuries, he upgrades his car and goes on a rampage through nine areas. His goal is to seek out the gang’s female boss and complete his vengeance.

Development

Road Blaster uses animation provided by the anime studio Toei Animation. It was animated under the guidance of Yoshinobu Inano, who also directed or key-animated such films such as Gundam: Char’s Counter Attack, Macross: Do You Remember Love?, and The Transformers: The Movie. It was animated using 15,000 hand-painted cels to produce over 30 minutes of animation. Game director Yoshihisa Kishimoto, who previously worked on Cobra Command, later directed the arcade version of Double Dragon, where the car from Road Blaster can be seen inside the Lee brothers’ garage at the start of the game.

The chopper from Cobra Command/Thunder Storm can also be seen at the beginning of Road Blaster.

Releases

Road Blaster was originally released in 1985 as a laserdisc-based arcade game. Various ports were released throughout history, including versions for the MSX, X1 (both in VHD format), Mega-CD/Sega CD, LaserActive (in Mega LD format), Saturn, PlayStation, and 3DO (prototyped as Turbo Blaster). However, only the Sega CD and Mega LD versions were released outside Japan, under the titles Road Avenger and Road Prosecutor, respectively. The titles were possibly changed to avoid confusion with the similarly titled arcade game RoadBlasters by Atari Games, which was ported to the Mega Drive around the same time. Road Blaster was also released for the X68000 and for Windows in 2011, exclusively in Japan. A unofficial Super NES port of the game titled Super Road Blaster was released in 2012, which uses the MSU-1 chip support. Cobra Command and Road Blaster were ported to iOS by Revolutionary Concepts in 2010 and 2011, respectively. In 2018, a port for the Amiga (OCS and AGA) and the CD32 was also released unofficially.

Other variations included one-shot reproductions for VHS cassette players such as Takara’s Video Challenger which was a limited interactive port of the Road Blaster arcade game. The Sega Saturn and PlayStation ports were compilations of Road Blaster and another laserdisc arcade game developed by the same team titled Thunder Storm (known outside Japan as Cobra Command).

Reception

In Japan, Game Machine listed Road Blaster on their January 15, 1986 issue as being the fourteenth most-successful upright/cockpit arcade unit of the month.

Dragon reviewers gave the Sega CD version of the game 4 out of 5 stars in 1993. GameFan noted it has greater interaction compared to Time Gal and Thunderstorm, and praised the “non-stop control of the vehicle,” graphics, smooth animation, and “andrenaline rush” experience. GamePro praised the highly detailed animation and stereo CD sound, and called it a “masterpiece” that is “like participating in an intense, action-packed, animated movie.”

On release, Famicom Tsūshin scored the Sega Saturn version a 25 out of 40, and the PlayStation version a 23 out of 40. Famitsu would later give the Mega CD version a score of 32 out of 40, while MEGA rated it at 86%. The iOS port was released to generally favourable reviews, including the scores of 8 out of 10 from IGN and 7 out of 10 from Pocket Gamer.

Legacy

A novelization of the game was announced in 2009. The project was officially authorized by G-Mode of Japan (the rights holder to most of Data East’s catalog) to be written by Mary Margaret Park.

References

External links

  • Road Blaster at the Killer List of Videogames
  • Road Blaster at Arcade-History
  • Road Blaster at Dragon’s Lair Project
  • MSX version at Generation MSX
ℹ️ Content on this page was adapted and summarized from Wikipedia contributors. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_Blaster

Related Games

View All →