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Road Blaster

Road Blaster
Road Blaster flyer.jpg
Japanese flyer for the arcade version
Developer(s)
Publisher(s)
Director(s) Yoshihisa Kishimoto
Programmer(s) Shintaro Kuma
Artist(s) Hideki Takayama
Yoshinobu Inano
Composer(s) Michael K. Nakamura
(intro theme by The Jaywalk)
Platform(s)
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Interactive movie
Vehicular combat
Mode(s) Single-player, two-player
Aggregate scores
Aggregator Score
GameRankings Sega CD: 90%
Metacritic iOS: 78%
Review scores
Publication Score
AllGame Arcade: 3.5/5 stars
Sega CD: 2.5/5 stars
LaserActive: 2/5 stars
Dragon Sega CD: 4/5 stars
Famitsu Mega CD: 32 / 40
Saturn: 25 / 40
PS1: 23 / 40
GameFan Sega CD: 383 / 400
GamePro Sega CD: 5 / 5
IGN iOS: 8 / 10
Electronic Games Sega CD: 86%
Pocket Gamer iOS: 7 / 10
Award
Publication Award
Famitsu Gold Award

Road Blaster (ロードブラスター?) is a 1985 interactive movie video game produced by Data East for the arcades.

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. The player controls the cross-hair 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.

The story of Road Blaster is inspired by revenge thriller films such as Mad Max, and takes place in a post-apocalyptic wasteland in the late 1990s United States (a future at the time of the game's release). 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.

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 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.


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Wikipedia

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