Streets of Rage

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Streets of Rage
centered
Developer(s) Sega
Publisher(s) Sega
Release date(s) 1991
Genre(s) Beat 'em up
Mode(s) Single player, Multiplayer
Rating(s) CERO: All Ages (A) (Sonic Gems Collection)
Ages 12 and up (B) (Virtual Console)
PEGI: 7+ (Virtual Console)
Platform(s) Sega Genesis, Sega Master System, Sega Game Gear, Virtual Console
Media 4-megabit cartridge
Input game pad

Streets of Rage is a side-scrolling beat 'em up released by Sega in 1991. It is the first part of the Streets of Rage series, a trilogy of games released for the Sega Genesis.

The game was released when Nintendo's SNES was imminent, and Sega needed exclusive games to rival the SNES. They needed a game similar to Capcom's Final Fight, a successful and popular arcade game. As such, Streets of Rage is very similar to Final Fight. A key selling points was that it supported 2 players, a feature omitted from the SNES port of Final Fight.

The game and its successors would all sport a soundtrack by Yuzo Koshiro based on various styles of European techno music.

Contents

The story resembles a typical 1980s crime film. The unnamed city where the games take place is under the control of a crime syndicate, run by the series' main villain, Mr. X. With the local government and police force under his control, crime runs rampant. Having had their request for a special unit to combat the trouble turned down by their corrupt superiors, three young police officers (Axel Stone, Blaze Fielding and Adam Hunter) resign from the police force and fight the syndicate on their own.

Gameplay is simple and remains the same throughout all three games: 'B' is used to attack and pick up items, 'C' to jump, and 'A' is a special attack, and by pressing the jump and attack buttons together the character will do a back attack. In Streets of Rage, the special attack is 'assistance' from a police car which will pull up at the level's beginning and fire napalm for Player 1 and rocket-powered grenades for Player 2. The explosions will take health from all enemies, but not the players. The player is given one Special Attack per life or per level, with power-ups shaped like police cars giving another. Though the game does not automatically scroll forwards like DJ Boy, players cannot go backwards, similar to Super Mario Bros.. Similar to the game Golden Axe, enemies walk onto the screen from both sides as well as occasionally appearing from other locations (less so than in the game's sequels). With the exception of round 7, there is a boss battle at the end of every round with a disproportionately large enemy ; unlike its sequels, none of the enemies are named within the game (only in the Japanese version's manual) and only the bosses have health bars (that appear below the player's during the boss battle).

Round One: City Street.
Round One: City Street.
  • Round 1: City Street
  • Round 2: Inner City
  • Round 3: Beachfront
  • Round 4: Bridge
  • Round 5: Aboard Ship
  • Round 6: Factory
  • Round 7: Freight Elevator
  • Round 8: Syndicate Headquarters

All rounds take place at night, apart from Stage 8, (which gradually progresses into early morning). In Round 6, two clones of the second boss are fought at once. The only level without a boss is Round 7; however, all of the previous 5 bosses appear in Round 8 (in a tougher form), as well as the final boss for that level, Mr. X. The player also loses the ability to call the police car for aid on this last stage.

  • Underlings
    • Galsia (misspelling of Garcia, later renamed Garcia in Streets of Rage 3)
    • Y.Signal
    • Nora
    • Jack
    • Haku-Oh
  • Bosses
    • Antonio
    • Souther
    • Abadede
    • Bongo
    • Onihime and Yasha (renamed Mona and Lisa in Streets of Rage 3)
    • Mr. X

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The game has two endings. Players can either destroy Mr. X or take his place as boss of the crime syndicate. To achieve the latter, a second player is needed. Before the final battle, Mr. X asks both players whether they would like to join him as his right hand man. If one player agrees and the other refuses, the players will be forced to fight each other. Mr. X will ask the winner once again if he would like to become his assistant. If the winning player then refuses, Mr. X calls the survivor a traitor and they fight for control of the syndicate. If the player wins, he or she is shown sitting in the boss's chair and laughing as the new crime overlord of the city.

If both players or the player in a one-person game agree to become Mr. X's right hand man, Mr. X presses a lever with his foot and drop the players back to Round 6 to play to the last scene again.

If the players say no, Mr. X will fight the players. Upon beating him, a slide show is shown during the credits with the three characters looking over Mr. X's body, walking outside to meet the cop in the police car, and then standing on a bridge watching the sun set.

Spoilers end here.

In Japan, the game and the series is known as Bare Knuckle.

8-Bit Versions: A version of Streets of Rage for both the Sega Master System and Sega Game Gear were made. The Game Gear version suffers from the poorer color palette and gameplay of the two. The Game Gear version omits Adam from the game and does not have the sprite animation for kneeing enemies. The Master System also features a boss on Round 6 which is not found in any other version of the game. It also has only 6 rounds instead of 8.

Arcade Versions: Sega ported Streets of Rage to arcade cabinets using both their Mega Tech and Mega Play arcade boards, the difference being that in the Mega Tech version you pay for time, not credits.

Collections: A signature title and franchise for Sega during the Mega Drive era the title was collected often: firstly Mega Games II (with Golden Axe and Revenge Of Shinobi) that was later bundled with the Sega Mega Drive, Sega Classics Arcade Collection (a Mega CD compilation with the two previously mentioned titles, plus Super Monaco GP and Columns, also available as in cartridge format for Mega Drive II). The voice effects for the characters in this version of the game were all redone with most fans agreeing they sound worse[citation needed], 6 Pak (composed of Streets of Rage, Sonic the Hedgehog, Columns, Revenge of Shinobi, Golden Axe and Super Hang-On); and Mega 6 (composed of Streets of Rage, World Cup Italia '90, Columns, Super Monaco GP, Revenge of Shinobi and Sonic the Hedgehog). Streets of Rage, Along with its Two Sequel's, were Included in the Japanese Version of the Sonic Gems Collection for the Gamecube, but was Omitted from the North American Version to Avoid it Gaining a T rating.

Virtual Console: The Genesis version of Streets of Rage was made available for the Wii Virtual Console in North America on February 19, 2007 and in Europe on March 2, 2007.

  • Blaze Fielding is very similar in design to the main character in another side-scrolling beat 'em up by Sega, Flashgal which was released in 1985.
  • The city that the Streets of Rage games are set in is based on New York. For example, in the second level of Streets of Rage 2, one can see the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in the skyline.
  • The policecar used in special attacks is from E-SWAT: Cyber Police, a Sega Arcade game that was also ported to the Mega Drive. The driver of the policecar used in the special attacks is never named, though he is met and greeted warmly by Axel in the game's good ending. In Sonic the Comic's adaptation, he was named "Murphy."
  • Round 5's bosses, the twins Onihime & Yasha, are simply a palette swap of Blaze Fielding's sprite. They reappear as bosses in Streets of Rage 3 (called Mona & Lisa in the western versions), and have their own sprites.
  • Many of Team Shinobi, the team behind Revenge of Shinobi were part of the Streets of Rage development team, and many in-game sounds and the main font are identical to that game.


Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.