Battle Monsters

Battle Monsters
Japanese Saturn cover art
Developer(s) Scarab
Publisher(s)
Platform(s) Saturn
Release
  • JP: June 2, 1995
  • NA: September 30, 1996
  • EU: 1995
Genre(s) Fighting
Mode(s) Single-player, Multiplayer

Battle Monsters (バトルモンスターズ) is a versus fighting game developed by Scarab for the Sega Saturn. It was originally published by Naxat Soft in Japan and later published in North America and Europe by Acclaim Entertainment. Similar to Atari's Pit-Fighter, the game makes heavy use of digitized human actors as the characters, plus some blood influenced by Midway's Mortal Kombat series. The game features 12 playable fighters, and plays out on multi-tiered stages.[1]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
EGM3.5/10[2]
GameSpot4.5/10[3]

Battle Monsters was panned by most critics, who found that the scaling graphics, complex controls, interactive backgrounds, and multi-tiered arenas did not work together well.[2][3] They also razed the choppy animation and pixelization on the digitized sprites, and likened the game to a second-rate Way of the Warrior clone.[2][3] Crispin Boyer of Electronic Gaming Monthly called it "one sorry mess of a fighting game",[2] Scary Larry of GamePro said it "doesn't even deserve coverage",[4] and Jeff Gerstmann summarized in GameSpot, "While Battle Monsters does have some good ideas and twists on the standard fighting game, the whole package is poorly executed".[3] However, E. Storm defended Battle Monsters in GameFan, assessing that "The gameplay, though not conventional, can be entertaining, with 12 moves plus a super for each ghoul. And while the digitized graphics don't impress me as much as they did a year ago [when the game was released in Japan], they are still representative of the monsters they surround."[5]

Next Generation reviewed the Saturn version of the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "the characters are never quite enveloped within the background. Instead, what's left is a nice background with characters which seem to be cut and pasted on to the television screen."[6]

See also

References

  1. "Fighting Special". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 88. Ziff Davis. November 1996. p. 180.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Review Crew: Battle Monsters". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 88. Ziff Davis. November 1996. p. 76.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Gerstmann, Jeff (December 1, 1996). "Battle Monsters Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  4. "ProReview: Battle Monsters". GamePro. No. 99. IDG. December 1996. p. 146.
  5. "Battle Monsters Review". GameFan. Vol. 4 no. 10. Metropolis Media. October 1996. p. 102.
  6. "Finals". Next Generation. No. 9. Imagine Media. September 1995. p. 88.


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