Thunderforce 4 review - Sega Megadrive

Read Original Review PDF for Thunderforce 4

Thunderforce 4 box artSo here it is. Thunderforce IV! All of those souls left blubbing for more after completing the third episode in the on-going galactic saga can at last throw away their Kleenex and get back to some furious shoot 'em up action. It is two years since the devastating battle of Thunderforce III and Ohn Empire are on the move again, plotting the extinction of all human life. So once more it's down to the ever-faithful Thunderforce pilots to save the world, the universe and everything.

There are quite a few differences between this new edition and its predecessors. Where II and III were four megabit carts, Thunderforce IV is eight. This means there are more levels and more weapons. The parallax scrolling has also entered new realms, with the shoot 'em up fun going higher and lower than the screen itself. Following in the best traditions of the genre, there are no end of weird alien spacecraft to destroy, no end of bosses to overcome, and no end of power-ups to collect! Belt up and blast off! Here we go!

What the Mean Machines staff thought

Reviewer

" I know what you're thinking! It is better than Thuderforce III? Well, to put your worries at rest, it is. The real question is how much better? Here the answer is less definite. The graphics are state of the art, with plenty of minutely detailed sprites, some breathtaking backdrops, and stunning weapon presentation. The animation is fast and smooth, and there is so much of it, what with hordes of attacking sprites and weapons, that the game suffers from slow down at times. Despite this, the game still plays as well as its predecessors, and the method of control is just as easy to get into. The most impressive feature though was the vertical scrolling, which succeeds in evoking a sense of vastness. As well as that, it is the only complete departure from Thunderforce III, and that prompts my only criticism of the game; originality, or rather the lack of it. In spite of its superb graphics and gameplay, there is nothing especially unique in this game. While it is visually a new experience, conceptually it isn't. I suppose you could call it a Thunderforce III re-spray. Obviously for those who haven't got the third one, this is the best you'll get on the Megadrive currently. But for those who have, I can't help thinking they ought to wait for something a bit different before they part with their cash. "

" Brilliant and challenging though it is, I found the lack of originality in Thunderforce IV a disappointment. Apart from the wider playfield, this is very much a traditional horizontally scrolling blaster where you simply shoot the baddies, pick up the power-ups and take out the end-of-level bosses. Even the weapons offer nothing new. Admittedly, the graphics and sounds are excellent, but the game basically boils down to being the same old shoot 'em up format taken to its extreme. I certainly enjoyed playing it, but because there wasn't anything new there I found that once I'd seen all the levels I didn't want to play it again. Thunderforce IV is definitely one of the most challenging and visually appealing blasters yet seen on the Megadrive, but to be honest I'd only buy it if I didn't have many horizontally scrolling shoot 'em ups in my collection. "

Reviewer

Overall Score87%

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Retrospective comments

Reviewer

Whenever you engage someone in a conversion about Megadrive shooters, Thunderforce IV usually gets mentioned at some point or another. After the good work seen in the first two Megadrive installments, Tecnosoft really did pull out all the stops to craft one of the most gorgeous-looking titles ever to grace the console. The visuals are out of this world and proved that the MD could match the SNES in this regard. The speed of the game is also breathtaking, with loads of sprites and bullets on screen at once - yet there is very rarely any slowdown.

This game simply could not have been done on the SNES, the slower clock speed of the CPU would have resulted in a title rife with slowdown, but on the MD it was possible. I think the MM team were a little too harsh on the game, and it deserves at mark in the mid-90's at least. A classic shooter and no mistake!

Have your say about Thunderforce 4

Giorgius - 19 Aug 2008, 23:37 GMT

It's true, a Snes conversion could have been a "slowdown festival", while the faster Megadrive was capable to handle the Thunderforce 4 code. However, the work performed by Technosoft don't do justice to the rapid Sega console clock, given the CONSISTENTamount of slowdown occurred when the action is quite intense, that is frequently in some stages... What about playing the SAT version (slowdown free), added to Thunderforce Gold Pack 2?

gaditanomania - 17 Sep 2008, 00:23 GMT

87 is a poor score.TF4 is the best shot´em up ever and the best shoot´em up of Genesis.

Is the worst score than i saw in the web.Usually the overall score is 10(1-10 score) or 95,98...(1-100).

Bob - 16 Oct 2008, 07:36 GMT

I still play this game and I must say that when I first read the original review I was surprised with the score. Certainly one of the best shooters (if not games) ever.

Tris Wicks - 05 Nov 2008, 06:55 GMT

I do hope everyone involved plays the sound to TF4 through righteous stereo speakers at a volume to make neighbors frown

yoghurt_dog - 12 Nov 2008, 04:07 GMT

87%????? surely a joke! this is without a doubt one of the greatest videogames ever made!

just so much fun to play - maintain concentration, set to hardest difficulty setting, get into the zone, and let your hand eye coordination and reflexes do the rest! (i realise that's true of most shooter not just this one...)

also, how trippy and psychedelic are the visuals? i love it, absolutely beautiful, surreal textures, colours, and objects on screen. if you like that sort of thing like i do (i love art, graffiti and all that sort of visual feasting) then playing this game is totally stimulatiing! not in a sexual way or anything though. it's almost as trippy as bio hazard battle, which is officially the trippiest and most visually arresting game ever.

then the sound! what a classic game soundtrack! i'm a sound engineer, music student, and general music nutcase - and games like this and streets of rage have had a MASSIVE influence on the direction and focus of contemporary music in the past 15 years. a ridiculous statement? no, not at all - just go and listen to any underground techno, or drum and bass, or even pop records.

i love this game.

Dilgar - 20 Nov 2008, 13:28 GMT

I had a different version of this game as a hand me down from my uncle. It showed on the box Lightning Force. Fell in love with the game the first time I played it. Simply the best music in a video game EVER. Now to find copies of the music online.....

deano - 30 Dec 2008, 20:45 GMT

if you love thunderforce,s exellent music try this album out -DragonForce - Inhuman Rampage. this is a unbelievable album sure to please you no end.. i love this top game too.

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Genki Videogames
Mean Machines Issue 24 - September 1992
Issue24
Shoot 'Em Up Sega Megadrive
Tecnosoft
Thunderforce 4

Thunderforce 4

Thunderforce 4

Thunderforce 4

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