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Encyclopedia > Star Fox (Super Nintendo)
Star Fox
Developers: Argonaut Software & Nintendo
Publisher: Nintendo
Designers: Shigeru Miyamoto & Katsuya Eguchi
Composer: Hajime Hirasawa
Release date: 1993
Genre: Scrolling shooter
Game modes: Single player
Platform: Super Famicom/Super NES
Media: 8-megabit Super FX cartridge

Star Fox (called Starwing in Europe, due to copyright issues) was the first game in the Star Fox series of video games. It was released in the spring of 1993 for Super Nintendo.


The game cartridge was the first to include the Super FX chip, an early 3D accelerator.


The complex display of three-dimensional models with texture-mapped polygons was still new and rare in video games, and this first Star Fox game was much hyped as a result. Star Fox had kemono character designs and the musical compositions of Hajime Hirasawa, as well as obstacle-course-style gameplay. Star Fox was developed by Nintendo and Argonaut Software, and published by Nintendo.

Contents

Competition version

Aside from the European renaming of the title there was also a promotional Star Fox: Super Weekend (Official Competition) (and, of course in Europe Star Wing: Super Weekend (Official Competition)) cartridge that was part of the game's marketing campaign in Europe and the US.


It featured time-limited single player mode on modified stages, there was also "...an exclusive bonus level."IGN.


"The altered start-up screen displays 'Official Competition Cartridge'. Depending on the points scored, players could win a t-shirt, a jacket, or even trips to international destinations. An estimated 2000 cartridges were made." - — IGN.


Sequels

Enlarge
Screenshot of Star Fox

Originally a SNES sequel entitled Star Fox 2 was in the works, but was never released.


In 1997, Nintendo published Star Fox 64 for Nintendo 64, featuring a complete remake and rewrite of the Star Fox storyline. Star Fox then made the jump to the Nintendo Gamecube, with Rare's Star Fox Adventures in 2001. This unusual game actually focused on third person combat on foot. The next sequel, Star Fox Assault, is expected to be released Valentine's Day 2005. Developed by Namco, it incorporates a first-person shooter aspect into the game.


References

  • Cherryroms (http://www.cherryroms.com/). Retrieved 8 February 2005.
  • IGN Star Fox: Super Weekend (Official Competition Cartridge) (http://cheats.ign.com/objects/496/496296.html?fromint=1). Retrieved 8 February 2005.

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Super Nintendo Entertainment System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (4372 words)
Nintendo would never achieve market leadership in the PAL region, and did not manage to do so in the U.S. until 1994, benefiting from Sega's pulling out of the market and its continued production of SNES and its games well after the 32-bit era of gaming had started.
Nintendo took the same stance against the distribution of SNES ROM image files and emulation as it did with the NES, insisting that they represented flagrant software piracy.
Star Fox 2, Comanche, and FX Fighter, all games designed to take advantage of the increased power of the Super FX GSU-2, were developed but never released for the SNES/SFC, disappointing many followers of the technology at the time.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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