Azure Striker Gunvolt

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Azure Striker Gunvolt
Azure Striker Gunvolt cover artwork.jpg
Developer(s) Inti Creates
Publisher(s) Inti Creates
Director(s) Yoshihisa Tsuda
Producer(s) Takuya Aizu
Designer(s) Hiroki Miyazawa
Toshiaki Tai
Programmer(s) Naoya Murakami
Artist(s) Yoshitaka Hatakeyama
Writer(s) Toshiaki Tai
Composer(s) Ippo Yamada
Ryo Kawakami
Katsunori Yoshino
Mina Hatazoe
Platforms Nintendo 3DS, Microsoft Windows
Release date(s) Nintendo 3DS
    Microsoft Windows
      Genre(s) Action, Platform game
      Mode(s) Single-player

      Azure Striker Gunvolt, known as Armed Blue Gunvolt (蒼き雷霆 ガンヴォルト Amudo Burū Ganvoruto) in Japan, is a action-platform game released by Inti Creates for the Nintendo 3DS eShop released in August 2014.[1] In addition to utilizing gameplay similar to Mega Man Zero, Azure Striker Gunvolt also introduced new gameplay elements such as Gunvolt's ability to "tag" enemies and target many at once, adding an additional layer of complexity to the genre.[2] A version for Microsoft Windows was released in August 2015.

      Gameplay

      Like the Mega Man series, Azure Striker Gunvolt is a side-scrolling action platform game. The player controls the eponymous Gunvolt, who is able to jump, dash, and utilize a gun with special bullets that "tag" their targets, which grants a homing effect to Gunvolt's electric fields. The player's actions are limited by an energy bar, which depletes when using the electrical field, using additional movement abilities such as double-jumping or air dashing, or being hit by enemies.

      Gameplay focuses heavily on the player's technique and skill in moving through levels. While finishing a level is relatively easy, the game provides a ranking system as well as several optional challenges. The game introduces a "chain" system in which the player's score is constantly increased so long as the player avoids being hit by enemies, with special actions such as defeating an enemy in the air or defeating multiple enemies at one time providing an additional bonus.[citation needed] The game uses an item-forging and equipping system, the former of which is instrumental in achieving the game's true ending.

      Additionally, Gunvolt has access to several super move-like skills called Offensive Skills, which allow him to perform powerful attacks or heal himself. Each of the game's bosses also have their own Offensive Skills, which are triggered when their health bar drops below a certain level, or in the case of Elise, one of the bosses, when one of her halves is killed before the other. Speaking to Joule in Gunvolt's apartment in between stages also increases the chance of being brought back to life by Lumen should he die in a stage, which gives Gunvolt unlimited Septimal energy, but at the cost of a higher stage ranking.

      Plot

      Azure Striker Gunvolt is set during an unspecified date in the near future, in which several people called "adepts" have developed "septimal powers".[3] These powers enable superhuman feats including flight, the use of powerful energy weapons, and manipulation of the elements like fire, water, and electricity. The world is at peace thanks to the efforts of a world-spanning corporation known as the Sumeragi Group. However, the Sumeragi Group is, in reality, controlling and experimenting on adepts. Gunvolt, one of the most powerful adepts, has the ability to create electrical fields and works for an organization known as QUILL, which is seeking to reveal and put a stop to Sumeragi's ulterior motives.

      The game opens with Gunvolt assigned on a mission to assassinate an adept named Lumen. He is told that Lumen has the ability to resonate with and control any adepts through her singing, and is considered dangerous. However, Gunvolt discovers that Lumen is housed within the body of a young girl named Joule, and can't bring himself to kill her. He instead rescues her, leading him to amicably defect from QUILL and set out on his own to protect her. He becomes a freelance agent, but still works jobs for QUILL from time to time.

      Six months after defecting from QUILL, Gunvolt is offered a freelance assignment by Moniqa, his handler from QUILL, to investigate and take out several agents of the Sumeragi Group. The Sumeragi agents are all adepts as well, but powered by strange Glaives, which house their essences, and are representative of each of the Seven Deadly Sins. The first agent is Merak, a lazy, unenthusiastic adept with the power to bend space for use in his attacks. The second, Jota, is a prideful agent with the power to manipulate light. The third, Viper, is loud and brash, has control over fire, and harbors a jealous rage against Gunvolt for Joule. The fourth, Carerra, uses magnetic fists and waves to draw his enemies close before destroying them with a powerful pulsewave. The fifth, Elise, is a split personality adept: her meek, timid side and her brash, assertive side are at constant odds, but her ability to raise the dead allows for even adepts to come back from defeat. The sixth, Stratos, is a drug-addicted adept with an insatiable hunger for the very drug that keeps what little of his sanity remains in check, and has control over swarms of insects. Additionally, a seventh adept, the bigender and carnal Zonda, attacks and wounds Zeno, one of Gunvolt's friends from QUILL, but is killed by a human warrior named Copen, who harbors a major hatred for adepts and carries a gun capable of firing bullets that can suppress their powers. Copen warns Gunvolt that they are not on the same side, and after a brief skirmish, retreats.

      After defeating the Sumeragi agents, Gunvolt's apartment is invaded, and Joule is kidnapped by a resurrected Merak. Gunvolt gives chase, destroying Merak for good, and rides a space elevator to a Sumeragi orbiting platform. Along the way, he encounters the resurrected Stratos, Jota, and Viper and fights them all to the death, before finding that Elise herself was also resurrected and split into a third, even more feral and wild personality. This third personality is killed by Copen, and Gunvolt is forced to fight and subdue him. Gunvolt finally encounters the leadership of Sumeragi, a young psychic adept named Nova. He uses Lumen in combat against Gunvolt, before summoning Joule and three Glaives into himself to transform into a monstrous beast. Gunvolt manages to kill Nova and escape with Joule. In the initial ending, Gunvolt runs into Asimov, his father figure and the leader of QUILL, who offers Gunvolt and Joule new places in QUILL, and reveals an ulterior motive: with Sumeragi in shambles, Asimov wishes to use Lumen, along with the Sumeragi satellite, to wipe out the human race as payback for suppression of adepts. Gunvolt refuses his offer, telling Asimov that he is no better than Sumeragi was, and Asimov responds by shooting him through the heart using Copen's gun (implying that he killed Copen to steal it from him), before turning the gun on Joule and shooting her as well, leaving them both for dead. However, if Gunvolt is wearing a special pendant created by Joule from hidden jewels discovered through the various levels, this ending will be revealed as a dream and the true ending will occur instead. The true ending sees Gunvolt on the verge of death as in the initial ending, but he is then rescued by Lumen at the last minute. He will awaken to find Joule's body being deathly cold and ultimately realize that, in order to save his life and be with him wherever he goes, Joule forsook her physical form by fusing her mind and personality with Lumen before further fusing herself into Gunvolt's septimal energy, which amplifies Gunvolt's power tremendously. After this revelation, Gunvolt chases down Asimov, running into Carrera along the way. Carrera demands vengeance for his prior defeat, but is killed for good by Gunvolt. Continuing onward to the elevator, Gunvolt confronts Asimov, who reveals himself to have the same electrical septimal powers as Gunvolt. With no other choice, Gunvolt fights him to the death. Following this final battle, Asimov warns Gunvolt that he will always have to fight for someone or something, and seemingly dies from his wounds. Zeno and Moniqa meet the space elevator as it arrives, only to find Asimov subdued and a heartbroken, wounded Gunvolt, who offers no explanation as to what happened before he simply wanders away into the morning light to be alone with Joule.

      Development

      Azure Striker Gunvolt was developed by Inti Creates, the Japanese video game development company that also created the Mega Man Zero series, Mega Man ZX, and both Mega Man 9 and Mega Man 10. Players who purchased the game upon release received a free download for the spin-off game, Mighty Gunvolt.

      Inti Creates later released an update for the game on March 5, 2015 on the Nintendo eShop. The update fixes typos in the game's dialogue, fixes various bugs in the game, the ability to transfer save data from the demo version to the purchased version, new features only available to the New Nintendo 3DS, and more new and/or updated content.[4]

      Reception

      Reception
      Aggregate scores
      Aggregator Score
      GameRankings 81%[5]
      Metacritic 77/100[6]
      Review scores
      Publication Score
      Destructoid 8/10[7]
      Game Informer 8/10[8]
      GameSpot 8/10[9]
      IGN 7.8/10[10]
      Nintendo Life 9/10[11]

      Azure Striker Gunvolt received mostly positive reviews and sold over 90,000 units six months after its release.[12][13] Inti Creates later announced that Azure Striker Gunvolt had sold 100,000 units by March 2015.[14] In March 2016, Inti Creates announced that Azure Striker Gunvolt has sold an impressive 150,000+ downloads worldwide and that a presentation about the sequel was aired on April 26, 2016. [15] Inti Creates announced that it has surpassed 160,000 downloads worldwide. [16]

      Sequel

      On February 27, 2015, Inti Creates announced that a sequel was already in development.[17] On March 3, 2016, Nintendo's official YouTube channel uploaded a trailer for Azure Striker Gunvolt 2, which showed the sequel's gameplay and a targeted release for Summer 2016.[18]

      References

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      External links