The 3-D Battles of WorldRunner

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| above = The 3-D Battles of WorldRunner

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| label2 = DeveloperTemplate:Pluralize from text | data2 = Square

| label3 = PublisherTemplate:Pluralize from text | data3 = Template:Vgrelease

| label4 = DirectorTemplate:Pluralize from text | data4 = Hironobu Sakaguchi

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| label6 = DesignerTemplate:Pluralize from text | data6 = Template:If first display both

| label7 = ProgrammerTemplate:Pluralize from text | data7 = Nasir Gebelli

| label8 = ArtistTemplate:Pluralize from text | data8 = Kazuko Shibuya

| label9 = WriterTemplate:Pluralize from text | data9 = Template:If first display both

| label10 = ComposerTemplate:Pluralize from text | data10 = Nobuo Uematsu<ref name=music>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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| label15 = GenreTemplate:Pluralize from text | data15 = Rail shooter, platform

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The 3-D Battles of WorldRunner (shortened to 3-D WorldRunner on the North American box art),<ref>Packaging shortens the title to 3-D WorldRunner, which is not in the game.</ref> originally released in Japan as Template:Nihongo foot, is a 1987 third-person rail shooter platform video game developed and published by Square for the Family Computer Disk System. It was later ported to cartridge format and published by Acclaim for the Nintendo Entertainment System.<ref name="WorldRunner"/>

For its time, the game was technically advanced; the game's three-dimensional scrolling effect is very similar to the linescroll effects used by Pole Position and many racing games of the day as well as the forward-scrolling effect of Sega's 1985 third-person rail shooter Space Harrier.<ref name="nextgen">(February 1999). "Hironobu Sakaguchi: The Man Behind the Fantasies". Next Generation Magazine, vol 50.</ref> 3-D WorldRunner was an early forward-scrolling pseudo-3D third-person platform-action game where players were free to move in any forward-scrolling direction and had to leap over obstacles and chasms. It was also one of the first stereoscopic 3-D games.<ref name=WorldRunner>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> WorldRunner was designed by Hironobu Sakaguchi and Nasir Gebelli, with music composed by Nobuo Uematsu. All were later core members of the team behind the Final Fantasy role-playing video game series.

Gameplay

File:3d worldrunner screen11.png
WorldRunner battles Menacing Meanies in the first world.

WorldRunner features many sprite-based elements that are typical of a forward-scrolling rail shooter game, where the player focuses on destroying or dodging onscreen enemies against a scrolling background.<ref name=ignacy/> 3-D WorldRunner incorporates a distinct third-person view, where the camera angle is positioned behind the main character.<ref name=WorldRunner/>

As Jack, players make their way through eight worlds, battling hostile alien creatures such as blob monsters and leaping over bottomless canyons.<ref name=ripoff/><ref name=WorldRunner/> Each world is divided into different quadrants, and the player must pass through each quadrant before the time counter on the bottom of the game screen reaches zero. In each quadrant, the player can find pillar-like columns that house power-ups, objects that are beneficial or add extra abilities to the game character such as temporary invincibility or laser missiles.<ref name=WorldRunner/> At the end of each world's last quadrant is a serpentine creature which must be defeated to advance.<ref name=WorldRunner/> A status bar at the bottom of the screen displays the player's score, the time counter, the world number, the world quadrant, the number of bonus stars (items that increase the player's score count) collected by the player, and the number of lives remaining.

Because the game is set against a constantly scrolling screen, Jack's movement cannot be stopped, but the player can speed up or slow down Jack's pace. The player is also allowed a degree of limited horizontal movement. When fighting Serpentbeasts at the end of each world, the player is capable of moving Jack freely in all directions. Jack's basic actions consist of jumping, used to dodge canyons and enemies, and firing collectible missiles of various types to destroy enemies.<ref name=WorldRunner/>

File:3dworldrunner 3deffect.png
In this screenshot, the "3D mode" has been activated.
Template:3d glasses

Part of the appeal and selling point of WorldRunner was its "3D mode".<ref name="gamebox"/> It was the first of three games by Square to feature such an option. To enter or exit 3D mode, players would press the select button.<ref name=ignacy/> When the 3D mode is enabled, the game uses computer image processing techniques to combine images from two slightly different viewpoints into a single image in a process known as anaglyph 3D.<ref name=WorldRunner/><ref name=glasses>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=glassy>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> While North American copies of the game included a pair of 3D glasses for players to view the effect,<ref name=WorldRunner/><ref name=glassy/> such glasses were sold separately from Japanese copies.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Plot

Players assume the role of Jack the WorldRunner, a wild "space cowboy" on a mission to save various planets overrun by serpentine beasts.<ref name="gamebox">Template:Cite book</ref> The game takes place in Solar System #517, which is being overrun by a race of aliens known as Serpentbeasts, who are led by the evil Grax.<ref name="gamecase">Template:Cite book</ref> As WorldRunner, the player must battle through eight planets to find and destroy Grax with fireballs.<ref name=ripoff/>

Development

In a 1999 interview with NextGeneration magazine, Sakaguchi admitted that he "liked Space Harrier", but said that his main reason for the development of the game was that Square owner Masafumi Miyamoto wanted to demonstrate Nasir Gebelli's 3D programming techniques for which he had been hired.<ref>(February 1999). "The Man Behind the Fantasies". Next Generation, issue 50, p. 89.</ref><ref name=hard>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Reception

At the time of release, Cashbox magazine praised the games visual effects and the variety of enemies and obstacles.<ref name=cash>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

In retrospective reviews, the game had a mixed reception. Game Informer praises the surrealistic landscape and behind the character running capability, but noted that they were not capable of seeing the 3D effect even with the 3D glasses on.<ref name=glassy/> Retro Gamer criticized for being a seeming ripoff of Sega's Space Harrier, noting that even the bosses of both games look similar.<ref name=ripoff>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> They did applaud the soundtrack and the bright visuals, comparing the color palette to Fantasy Zone.<ref name=ripoff/> Vito Gesualdi of Destructoid named it among the "five most notorious videogame ripoffs of all time" in 2013.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Commercially, the game was met with modest success, selling roughly 500,000 copies worldwide.<ref name="nextgen"/> The sales of this game title and other titles from Square at this time were not enough for Square to stay in business, and the companies fortunes only turned around with the release of the first Final Fantasy.<ref name=finalrunner>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Legacy

Template:Nihongo is a Japan-only follow-up to the game released on December 7, 1987,<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> developed by the same team who did the original, but as a regular cart instead of for the Disk System. JJ was one of the few games to utilize the Famicom 3D System,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and was Square's last work before the inception of the popular Final Fantasy franchise.

JJ moves at a much faster pace with increased difficulty, plus a more "sinister" art style and use of color. The soundtrack was again composed by Nobuo Uematsu, and each track was made to match the respective track from the first game.

See also

Notes

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References

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