Super Adventure Island

Super Adventure Island (高橋名人の大冒険島, Takahashi Meijin no Daibōken Jima, "Master Takahashi's Great Adventure Island") is a side-scrolling platform game by Hudson Soft released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1992 and later re-released for the Wii's Virtual Console download service in 2011. It was the first Adventure Island game released for the SNES and came out between the releases of the NES games Adventure Island II and Adventure Island 3. It was later followed by Super Adventure Island II. The game's soundtrack was composed by Yuzo Koshiro.

Super Adventure Island
North American box art by Greg Martin
Developer(s)Produce!
Publisher(s)Hudson Soft
Composer(s)Yuzo Koshiro
SeriesAdventure Island
Platform(s)Super NES, Super Famicom
Release
  • JP: January 11, 1992
  • NA: April 1992
  • PAL: November 19, 1992
Genre(s)Platformer
Mode(s)Single-player

An unrelated game also titled Super Adventure Island (新高橋名人の冒険島, Shin Takahashi Meijin no Bōken Jima) was released for mobile phones between 2004 in Japan[1] and 2005 in North America.[2] It is a remake of Wonder Boy: Monster Land, which was previously ported to the PC Engine by Hudson as Bikkuriman World.

Plot

Over the course of his adventures, Master Higgins managed to maintain the peace and tranquility of his home, the mystical Adventure Island, and even earned the love and support of the local "Miss Jungle", the lovely Tina (erroneously called "Jeannie Jungle" in English materials). At nighttime, the young hero was quietly enjoying a well-deserved rest with his grateful girlfriend Tina loyally leaning on his side atop a treetop (said to be stargazing in the English manual). When the warmth of Tina's soft touch suddenly becomes a chilling coldness, he turns around and is shocked to find that the evil sorcerer, Dark Cloak, used a spell to turn Tina into a stone statue for eternity. Dark Cloak retreats to the legendary Ice Mountain across the sea, and Higgins resolves to defeat the wicked sorcerer in order to restore her to life.

The player controls Higgins as he travels his way through five stages with four areas each. The first three areas in each stage has Higgins fighting his way through an obstacle course, fighting many traps and enemies, in order to reach the goal ball. The final area in each stage consists of a boss battle.

Gameplay

Other than the improved visuals and audio as a result of the switch of hardware to the SNES, the rules of the game are not much different from the original Adventure Island. Although released shortly after Adventure Island II for the NES, Master Higgins' dinosaur companions are not present in this installment. However, Higgins now has a choice between two weapons: the standard stone axe from previous games and a boomerang (which was later introduced in Adventure Island 3). Whereas the axe can only be tossed left or right, Higgins can shoot the boomerang in four directions (up and down, as well as left and right). When Higgins first picks a weapon, he can only toss one shot at a time. By picking up the same weapon in a row, Higgins can toss up to three shots consecutively. When Higgins picks a fourth weapon of the same kind, his shots will turn into fireballs, which are more powerful and capable of destroying stones. At this point, when the player switches from axes to boomerangs or vice versa, the fireball effect will remain in place until the player loses a life. While Higgins has lost the ability to run faster in this game, he has gained the ability to crouch, which can be followed up with a super-jump. During gameplay, Master Higgins must collect tropical fruit in order to keep his life bar from depleting; he also can acquire a skateboard which will allow him to travel across the stage faster.

Other media

Super Adventure Island is one of the video games featuring in the manga titled Cyber Boy, by Nagai Noriaki, Published by Coro Coro Comic and Shogakukan, from 1991 to 1993.

Reception

Allgame gave a rating of 4.5 out of 5 noting the game has the same gameplay as the game’s predecessor with better graphics and a more varied soundtrack and the game has a variety of challenges although giving criticism on the main character’s slow movement and limited jumping concluding “the game is an enjoyable adventure nonetheless.”[4]

References

  1. "「新高橋名人の冒険島」 for ボーダフォンライブ!" (in Japanese). Archived from the original on December 5, 2004. Retrieved December 22, 2012.
  2. "Super Adventure Island". GameSpot. Retrieved December 22, 2012.
  3. "Super Adventure Island".
  4. Brett Alan Weiss. "Super Adventure Island Review". allgame. Archived from the original on November 16, 2014. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.