Ikari Warriors - Full Playthrough (C64)

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Ikari Warriors involves Ralf Jones and Clark Steel (known outside Japan as Paul and Vince in the Ikari series) battling through hordes of enemies. According to designer Keiko Iju, the game was inspired by the then-popular Rambo films and takes its name from the Japanese title of Rambo: First Blood Part II (Rambo: Ikari no Dasshutsu or "The Angry Escape").

The game was followed by two sequels: Victory Road and Ikari III: The Rescue. Ralf and Clark would later appear as playable characters in The King of Fighters series. Ralf and Clark also make an appearance as playable characters in Metal Slug 6.

The player begins as one of two commando-type warriors, garbed in red (Ralf) or blue (Clark) (depending on whether they are player one or two). They must proceed from the bottom of the screen upwards, towards the village of Ikari. Trying to prevent them from reaching the village are enemy soldiers and other units with a frightening arsenal of firepower. Along the way, players may commandeer enemy tanks to help fight their way through the enemy personnel. The tanks are immune to enemy bullets, but have a limited supply of fuel and will sustain damage when it runs out or the tank is caught in an explosion, taking the player with it unless he can exit the tank and get clear before it blows up.

Ikari Warriors was the first 'Commando' style game to give the player a limited amount of ammunition (99 bullets and 99 grenades) as well as power-up and bonus icons to improve your firepower, dropped by red soldiers. These are listed as follows:

Gun: restores machine gun ammo to maximum.
Grenade: restores grenade ammo to maximum.
Gas: restores all ammo to maximum and refuels the tank if the player is driving one.
K: Kills all enemy troops on-screen, except ones hiding underwater.
S: Gun and tank shots are sped up.
L: Long-range shot. Bullets travel the entire length of the screen.
F: Bullets turn red and can destroy trucks, gun emplacements and bases. Pierce shot. Bullets pass through rocks and other barriers without being blocked. Tank shots become rockets.
B: Blast grenades. Grenades turn red and produce giant-sized explosions. All tank shots become blast grenades as well.
The game's joysticks could be rotated in clockwise and counter-clockwise directions. Turning the joystick changed the direction the character faced independent of the direction the character might be moving. This gave the player freedom to attack or walk in eight different directions. This made it generally easier—but sometimes harder—to take out enemy units. Aiming must also be taken into account by the warrior using the machine gun in his right hand, while throwing grenades with his left; no shot is fired from directly in front of the player. If a player takes too long moving up screen, the computer starts using "call for fire" on him. A red spots appears below him. This is tracking fire to speed up the game.

Because of its innovative controls, this game was initially very popular. However, the joysticks proved somewhat fragile, especially when played heavily as this game was. They need to be repaired often since being unable to turn makes the game almost unplayable.

Another regionalization was the ending. In all versions, Japanese, European, and American, the heroes must rescue a kidnapped Army officer. In the Japanese version the man in distress is named General Kawasaki, named after SNK's founder Eikichi Kawasaki. In the American version the man in distress is named Colonel Cook, named after Leland Cook, who was the president of Tradewest, an American software company that helped SNK regionalize the game for American systems.







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