Solar Striker is a vertically scrolling shooter video game developed by Nintendo and Minakuchi Engineering and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy. It was first published in Japan in January 1990, then released later in North America in February 1990 and in Europe in September 1990.
Plot
In the year 2159, the Earth is at war with the planet Reticulon (Great Dark Star Torino in the Japanese version). The Earth Federation Army creates the advanced fighter Solar Striker on a secret base on the Moon. Solar Striker's mission is to fly to Reticulon and destroy the core.
Gameplay
thumb|left|The Solar Striker shooting the first boss
The player controls the advanced space fighter, code-named Solar Striker. There are six levels of play against enemies known as the forces of Reticulon. These enemies appear from the top of the screen. The player can amass power-ups by shooting special ships. One power-up doubles the player's firepower, three power-ups triples the player's firepower, and five power-ups causes shots to explode on impact with enemies, greatly aiding combat against tough enemies and bosses that take many hits to destroy. There are a variety of enemies as well as sub-bosses in later levels. When the player completes all six levels for the first time and after the credits roll, the player will be able to play Hard Mode by pressing Select instead of Start from the title screen.
Development
Solar Striker was designed by Gunpei Yokoi and Keisuke Terasaki, Allgame rated it 2.5/5, describing it as a "decent shooter but nothing great", and citing its difficulty as a deterrent to enjoying it. Games Are Fun gave it a 7 out of 10. German magazine Power Play praised the title for its variety in terms of enemies and levels, though noted the underlying simplicity of the game as well, giving it a score of 70%.
Author Jeff Rovin in the book How to Win at Game Boy Games described the title as "one of the oldest kinds of Nintendo games", comparing it to SNK's Alpha Mission but added there were too few instances of innovation or surprises, and the powerups were "unsatisfying".
Notes
References
External links
- Official Japanese website (translated using Excite.Co.Jp)
- Official Japanese instructions in PDF format
- Solar Striker at NinDB
