
By Arshad Abdul-Aal
| Before the late 90's, 3D mission-based mecha action games were mostly associated with PC series like MechWarrior or Heavy Gear, and even those leaned more towards complex simulation than arcade action. Sure, Virtual On is nice and all, but there’s not much of an objective beyond just pummeling your opponent. A company called From Software changed all that when it brought out Armored Core on the Playstation. Combining deep yet accessible customization with solid controls, the series became a cult hit with mecha fans and continues to be well into the new generation of consoles despite its aging and slow-to-evolve gameplay. Another milestone came in 2001, when Konami released Zone of the Enders for the Playstation 2. While most people considered it as little more than a tech demo (to say nothing of its unfortunate status as the courier for the Metal Gear Solid 2 demo), Hideo Kojima's little side project effectively raised the bar skywards with a swift kick to the nuts, proving that mecha don’t have to be bulky and ground-bound for the game to be fun. Four years and a sequel later, no other game (mecha or otherwise) came close to matching the blistering speed and intense free-flying gameplay of the ZOE games. I’m rather puzzled why no one considered using the engine for a Dragon Ball Z game. Finally Banpresto, developers of the popular Super Robot Wars series of strategy RPGs, saw the potential for an incredible licensed mecha action game and turned towards From Software, fresh off of releasing their tenth Armored Core installment, to realize that idea. The result of this collaboration is Another Century’s Episode, and the bar for licensed mecha games was just raised a lot higher. |
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Another Century’s Episode - Playstation 2 (2005)
Japanese Cover |
Another Century’s Episode |
Another Century’s Episode |
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Aura Battler Dunbine Plot Summary: Motocross racer Sho Zama is suddenly transported to the mysterious world of Byston Well located in another dimension, where he is forcefully drafted into the military under the ambitious lord Drake Luft. Drake seeks to unify the entire land under his rule, even if it means shedding the blood of most of the population. Mecha: |
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Martian Successor Nadesico: Prince of Darkness Plot Summary: Three years after the events of the TV series (which isn’t in ACE but appears in the sequel, how’s that for a paradox?), the uneasy peace between Earth and Jupiter is about to end thanks to an uprising by a rebel group called the Martian Successors. Ruri Hoshino, former crewmember of the Nadesico and now captain of the Nadesico B, must gather her old comrades and set out to stop the conflict while solving the mysteries surrounding the string of boson jumper kidnappings. Mecha: |
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Blue Comet SPT Layzner Plot Summary: In an alternate 20th century, mankind has developed space colonies as far as the planet Mars. However, Earth will soon come under siege by an alien race known as the Grados. It’s up to half-Earthling half-Gradosonian Eiji Asuka, his stolen SPT Layzner and the six survivors from a UN-promoted culture exchange program on Mars to warn the Earth’s nations before it’s too late.
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Brain Powered Plot Summary: In a post-apocalyptic world, the human population is devastated by natural disasters, while an ancient ruin known as Orphan is attempting to leave the planet and possibly wipe all life on Earth in the process. A group called the Reclaimers is intent on stopping anyone who gets in Orphan’s way, and caught in the middle of the conflict is Yuu Isami; a young boy torn between obeying his controlling family (complete with a sister suffering from MPD) and following his feelings. Mecha: |
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New Mobile Report Gundam Wing Plot Summary: In the future, mankind has colonized space. However, the colonies are being oppressed by the governments of Earth, who rule over them by force. Sick of this tyranny, the colonists, with the help of five rouge scientists from Earth, construct and send five powerful Gundam mobile suits & their pilots down to Earth in order to wage guerilla warfare against the Organization of Zodiac, one of the Earth’s most powerful military factions. Mecha: |
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Metal Armor Dragonar Plot Summary: The Lunar Empire of Giganos chases a refuge ship carrying stolen metal armor prototypes to a neutral colony. Caught in the crossfire, three friends and pilot trainees stumble across the metal armors and pilot them in a desperate attempt to protect the colony. Much destruction and hilarity ensues.
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Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam Plot Summary: Seven years after the end of the infamous One Year War depicted in the original Mobile Suit Gundam TV series, an elite military division of the Earth Federation known as the Titans slowly begins to establish its rule over the Earth. Only the two rebel groups AEUG (Anti-Earth Union Group) & Karaba stand in their way. Former Zeon ace Char Aznable, under the ridiculously-sounding alias of Quattro Bajeena, infiltrates a Titans base to discover the Federation’s new Gundam mobile suit. Young teenager Kamille Bidan helps him steal it in the now common Gundamjack plot. Eventually, Kamille designs his own Gundam and aids the AEUG in putting a stop to the Titans' ruthlessness. Mecha: |
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Heavy Metal L-Gaim Plot Summary: Far away in the Pentagona system, immortal emperor Oldan Poseidal has conquered all five of its planets. Daba Myroad, the last surviving heir of the Yaman clan and owner of the legendary white heavy metal L-Gaim, leads a rebellion in order to free the planets from Poseidal. Mecha: |
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Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack Plot Summary: Everyone’s favorite colony dropper Char Aznable returns for one last attempt at freeing humanity from the clutches of Earth’s gravity by dropping the giant mining colony Axis and bringing about another ice age. Only the Earth Federation’s special unit Londo Bell and One Year War veteran Amuro Ray stand in his way. Amuro and his personally designed Nu Gundam must put a stop to Char’s homicidal scheme and end their heated rivalry once and for all. Mecha: |
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general plot holding all these series together is pretty basic compared
to later installments. You’re an unnamed pilot working for a peace-keeping
taskforce belonging to the United Community of Earth (UCE). The UCE developed
a powerful and volatile substance called E2 to deal with an energy shortage,
and of course all the bad guys want some of it for themselves. It’s your
job to keep it out of their grubby metallic mitts. The multiple plots unfold
over the course of 45 missions, which makes ACE longer than both ZOE’s put
together. Upon completing a mission, you’re graded and then awarded with
Ace points. Ace points are spent on three things. You can buy new mecha
once they are available. You can also upgrade your ship by increasing its
storage capacity (you can only have as many mecha as your ship can hold),
increasing its repair points (used to fix damage incurred after a mission), or increasing repair
efficiency (lessens repair points consumption). The last and almost completely
useless option is upgrading the mecha itself. You can do things like increase
its defense or speed, increase a specific weapon’s power or lower its reload
time and so on, but there are a couple of catches. First, any stat you upgrade
lowers an opposing stat, so increasing a weapon’s power means increasing
its reload time and vice versa. Second, each mecha has a limited number
of upgrade slots. It’s a bit awkward to get used to, but fortunately it’s
also completely unnecessary. The whole game can be finished without ever
touching the mecha upgrade option.
One of the biggest liberties taken with the licenses is that all mecha can fly indefinitely regardless of whether they could do so in the show or not. This places the game under scrutiny by mecha anime purists (and morons in general) who decry this as unrealistic, but it’s an insignificant quibble in lue of the great attention given to other details. On top of the incredible graphics, all the mecha are modeled up to scale. Play as a heavy metal in stage full of aura battlers and you’ll tower over them, or take the Dunbine itself and attempt to tackle one of the many large bosses to really get a sense for the difference in size. It's a great testament to the care the developer took in keeping the presentation as faithful to the shows as possible. The boost mechanic also lifts a strategic element from the Armored Core games: Just as it's hard for your enemy to hit a moving target, it's hard for you to hit them accurately while moving at high speeds. Like the recent Ace Combat games, there's radio chatter among your wingmen and supporting cast. Unlike Ace Combat, however, it doesn't get so obnoxiously consistent and melodramatic that it blocks out the music (then again, I don't understand Japanese, and there's something pleasing about having the late great Hirotaka Suzuoki as Captain Bright Noa yelling his head off at you). The text sometimes blocks the lower part of the HUD, but it's not very obstructive. Speaking of music, the soundtrack is naturally composed of tracks from the featured shows plus some original material, topped off with the beautiful opening song "Garnet Moon" by Hitomi Shimatani. The anime themes were given awesome rock remixes, which unfortunately weren't retained in later installments. Thankfully From Software didn't just stop at good gameplay mechanics and called it a day (i.e. the Eureka 7 games). The missions are extremely fun and varied, like sniping space mines to clear a path for a shuttle or using a sonar to find sunken cargo underwater. In one cool mission, you have to protect a conference hall from enemies without being seen by media helicopters lest the TV ratings drop! Like most games based on licensed properties, you have missions that take place during set pieces from the shows like facing the giant space station Libra from Gundam Wing or fighting inside the barrel of the giant colony laser from Zeta Gundam. Of course there's the usual "blow everything up" and the requisite protect missions, but thankfully apart from the first protect mission they never degrade into pointless frustration. Like the recent console Super Robot Wars games, every mission contains a secret objective. These include finishing the mission in a certain amount of time, finding hidden targets or getting a specified attack chain. Every five secrets unlocks a new mech to purchase. Some of the secret objectives are pretty challenging, and that's when the upgrade system becomes somewhat necessary, as having shorter reload intervals and faster verniers is the key success. Once you finish the main game, a free mission mode opens up. Here the limitations of your ship no longer apply so you can stockpile mecha and upgrade them as you please. You can see your best rank for each mission as well as the secret objective and whether you achieved it or not. You also unlock Extra Mission 1 & 2, which are basically 1-on-2 boss rushes. Extra Mission 2 also has an exclusive boss which doesn't appear in the main game. A 2P versus mode is available if you want to pit your favorite mechs against each other in vertical split screen, but good luck finding someone to play it with. Unfortunately, nowadays ACE gets an undeserved bad rep in the light of the many refinements made to its sequels, which are only a year apart each. But it's still a solid game on its own, plus it has two series (Zeta & Wing TV) unique to it and better mission variety than its sequels. If I had to nitpick, I'd mostly complain about the absence of the upgraded mecha from Gundam Wing and Dragonar. ACE was re-released as part of the Playstation The Best line.
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