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The Terminator (Sega CD video game)

The Terminator is a 1993 platform shoot 'em up game developed and published by Virgin Games for the Sega CD. It is based on the 1984 film of the same name, and includes full motion video from the film. The game was praised for its graphics and its soundtrack performed by Tommy Tallarico, although the film footage was considered low quality. The gameplay also received some criticism.

The Terminator
U.K. cover art
Developer(s)Virgin Games
Publisher(s)Virgin Games
Producer(s)Erik Yeo
Neil Young
Stephen Clarke-Willson
Tom Gibson
Barry Pringle Sr.
Designer(s)Erik Yeo
Tom Tanaka
Douglas Cope
Silas Warner
Programmer(s)Silas Warner
Artist(s)Nick Bruty
Writer(s)Erik Yeo
Justin Norr
Composer(s)Tommy Tallarico
Brad Fiedel
Bijan Shaheer
Joey Kuras
TeknoMan of Teknologic
SeriesTerminator
Platform(s)Sega CD
ReleaseDecember 1993
Genre(s)Platform, shoot 'em up
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay edit

 
Gameplay screenshot

The Terminator is a platform shoot 'em up game. It includes 10 levels. Playing as soldier Kyle Reese, the player travels through a Skynet facility during the first four levels, set in 2029. After battling Skynet's Terminator machines, Kyle finds a time machine and travels to Los Angeles 1984, where the remainder of the game takes place. Kyle locates Sarah Connor and protects her from the Terminator, a machine sent from the future by Skynet. The Terminator is tasked with killing Sarah, preventing her future son John Connor from leading the human resistance against Skynet.[1][2][3][4] The player can use various weapons and has unlimited ammunition. The player can crouch, jump, and shoot in multiple directions.[1][2][4]

Development and release edit

Although the game is based on the film, creative license was taken to give more variation in the gameplay.[5] The graphics and music took advantage of the Sega CD's capabilities, and the game includes the use of digitized full motion video (FMV) from the film. The FMV scenes appear in between levels to advance the story.[5]

The game utilized QSound.[6] The soundtrack was composed and recorded by Tommy Tallarico, with additional songs contributed by Brad Fiedel ("The Terminator Theme"), Bijan Shaheer ("Future Shock"), Joey Kuras ("Visions") and TeknoMan of Teknologic ("CyberTek").[7] It includes hard rock, pop and techno music.[1][8] Tallarico said the game's graphics "were still very much 16-bit-looking and the music you'd hear would be like music on the radio or on an album – and it was a bit jarring. So I would get into screaming matches with the producers because they told me they didn't want that proper music in the game. They said it doesn't sound like a videogame and I said exactly – it doesn't have to any more!"[9]

The Terminator was originally scheduled for release in June 1993,[10][11] but was delayed because of changes at Virgin.[12] It was released six months later than initially scheduled.[12][13]

Reception edit

The Terminator was praised for its graphics and its inclusion of FMV,[3][2][16][12] although the latter was also criticized for its poor quality.[22][23][19][20] Paul Pettengale of Sega Power wrote, "The images are so grainy, and the colours so fuzzy, looking too hard at these bits could be bad for your eyes".[22] The soundtrack was praised.[3][2][22][23][12][16] GamePro stated that the "catchy music fits the action well".[3]

Some reviewers were critical of the gameplay. Julian Connolly of MegaTech felt that the game had no longterm value, concluding that it "looks great, sounds great, plays great for a while but all this shooting wears you down".[2] Pettengale found the gameplay unoriginal and wrote "not even a superb soundtrack can save a game when it's had so little thought put into it".[22] Paul Mellerick of Mega was disappointed by the linear level design and concluded, "A well-presented blast, but ultimately boring, very samey and a bit of a waste".[1] David Roberts of Sega Zone found the game to be lacking variety.[23] Game Players considered it an average platform game.[16]

In a later review for AllGame, Shawn Sackenheim praised the "bleak" and "dreary" graphics, stating that they "lend themselves nicely to the mood of the game". He also praised Tallarico's score, writing that it added "a ton to the impact of the graphics and the mood of each level". Sackenheim concluded, "While it may not have been the best looking action/platformer around, it could definitely give any other game a run for its money".[14] Jeuxvideo reviewed the game in 2010, praising the soundtrack and controls.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Mellerick, Paul (January 1994). "Terminator CD". Mega. United Kingdom. pp. 44–45.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Connolly, Julian (February 1994). "Terminator CD". MegaTech. United Kingdom. pp. 64–66.
  3. ^ a b c d "Sega CD ProReview: The Terminator". GamePro. United States. June 1993. pp. 64–65.
  4. ^ a b c d "Test The Terminator". Jeuxvideo.com (in French). November 10, 2010. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Terminator CD". Sega Power. United Kingdom. July 1993. pp. 16–17.
  6. ^ Horowitz, Ken (1 June 2005). . Sega-16. Archived from the original on 30 January 2020.
  7. ^ The Terminator instruction manual (US). Virgin Games. 1993. p. 19.
  8. ^ Millsap, Zack (6 February 2021). "How Tommy Tallarico and the Terminator Revolutionized Video Game Music Forever". CBR. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  9. ^ "Tommy Tallarico". Retro Gamer. 10 February 2015. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  10. ^ "The Terminator (Sega CD preview)". GameFan. April 1993. pp. 18–19.
  11. ^ "The Terminator (Sega CD preview)". GameFan. May 1993. p. 34.
  12. ^ a b c d "The Terminator (Sega CD review)". GameFan. February 1994. pp. 42–43.
  13. ^ "Shoot-'Em-Eps". Mega. United Kingdom. January 1994. p. 87.
  14. ^ a b Sackenheim, Shawn. . AllGame. Archived from the original on 15 November 2014.
  15. ^ "Mega CD Review: The Terminator". Consoles + (in French). France. April 1994. pp. 112–113.
  16. ^ a b c d "The Terminator (Sega CD)". Game Players. May 1994. p. 124.
  17. ^ "Le Terminator Frappe Encore. Encore?". Joypad (in French). France. April 1994. pp. 98–100.
  18. ^ "Terminator". Player One (in French). France. April 1994. pp. 98–99.
  19. ^ a b "T-800 is back". Video Games (in German). Germany. March 1994. p. 76.
  20. ^ a b "The Terminator". Game Power (in Italian). Italy. March 1994. pp. 76–77.
  21. ^ "Terminator". MegaForce (in French). France. April 1994. pp. 76–79.
  22. ^ a b c d e Pettengale, Paul (February 1994). "The Terminator". Sega Power. United Kingdom. pp. 74–75.
  23. ^ a b c d Roberts, David (February 1994). "Terminator CD". Sega Zone. United Kingdom. p. 63.
  24. ^ "The Terminator". Supersonic (in French). France. April 1994. pp. 16–17.

External links edit

terminator, sega, video, game, terminator, 1993, platform, shoot, game, developed, published, virgin, games, sega, based, 1984, film, same, name, includes, full, motion, video, from, film, game, praised, graphics, soundtrack, performed, tommy, tallarico, altho. The Terminator is a 1993 platform shoot em up game developed and published by Virgin Games for the Sega CD It is based on the 1984 film of the same name and includes full motion video from the film The game was praised for its graphics and its soundtrack performed by Tommy Tallarico although the film footage was considered low quality The gameplay also received some criticism The TerminatorU K cover artDeveloper s Virgin GamesPublisher s Virgin GamesProducer s Erik YeoNeil YoungStephen Clarke WillsonTom GibsonBarry Pringle Sr Designer s Erik YeoTom TanakaDouglas CopeSilas WarnerProgrammer s Silas WarnerArtist s Nick BrutyWriter s Erik YeoJustin NorrComposer s Tommy TallaricoBrad FiedelBijan ShaheerJoey KurasTeknoMan of TeknologicSeriesTerminatorPlatform s Sega CDReleaseDecember 1993Genre s Platform shoot em upMode s Single player Contents 1 Gameplay 2 Development and release 3 Reception 4 References 5 External linksGameplay edit nbsp Gameplay screenshotThe Terminator is a platform shoot em up game It includes 10 levels Playing as soldier Kyle Reese the player travels through a Skynet facility during the first four levels set in 2029 After battling Skynet s Terminator machines Kyle finds a time machine and travels to Los Angeles 1984 where the remainder of the game takes place Kyle locates Sarah Connor and protects her from the Terminator a machine sent from the future by Skynet The Terminator is tasked with killing Sarah preventing her future son John Connor from leading the human resistance against Skynet 1 2 3 4 The player can use various weapons and has unlimited ammunition The player can crouch jump and shoot in multiple directions 1 2 4 Development and release editAlthough the game is based on the film creative license was taken to give more variation in the gameplay 5 The graphics and music took advantage of the Sega CD s capabilities and the game includes the use of digitized full motion video FMV from the film The FMV scenes appear in between levels to advance the story 5 The game utilized QSound 6 The soundtrack was composed and recorded by Tommy Tallarico with additional songs contributed by Brad Fiedel The Terminator Theme Bijan Shaheer Future Shock Joey Kuras Visions and TeknoMan of Teknologic CyberTek 7 It includes hard rock pop and techno music 1 8 Tallarico said the game s graphics were still very much 16 bit looking and the music you d hear would be like music on the radio or on an album and it was a bit jarring So I would get into screaming matches with the producers because they told me they didn t want that proper music in the game They said it doesn t sound like a videogame and I said exactly it doesn t have to any more 9 The Terminator was originally scheduled for release in June 1993 10 11 but was delayed because of changes at Virgin 12 It was released six months later than initially scheduled 12 13 Reception editReceptionReview scoresPublicationScoreAllGame nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 14 Consoles 87 15 Game Players62 16 Jeuxvideo com18 20 4 Joypad86 17 Player One80 18 Video Games DE 54 19 Game Power78 100 20 Mega67 1 MegaForce85 21 MegaTech69 2 Sega Power58 22 Sega Zone65 23 Supersonic92 24 The Terminator was praised for its graphics and its inclusion of FMV 3 2 16 12 although the latter was also criticized for its poor quality 22 23 19 20 Paul Pettengale of Sega Power wrote The images are so grainy and the colours so fuzzy looking too hard at these bits could be bad for your eyes 22 The soundtrack was praised 3 2 22 23 12 16 GamePro stated that the catchy music fits the action well 3 Some reviewers were critical of the gameplay Julian Connolly of MegaTech felt that the game had no longterm value concluding that it looks great sounds great plays great for a while but all this shooting wears you down 2 Pettengale found the gameplay unoriginal and wrote not even a superb soundtrack can save a game when it s had so little thought put into it 22 Paul Mellerick of Mega was disappointed by the linear level design and concluded A well presented blast but ultimately boring very samey and a bit of a waste 1 David Roberts of Sega Zone found the game to be lacking variety 23 Game Players considered it an average platform game 16 In a later review for AllGame Shawn Sackenheim praised the bleak and dreary graphics stating that they lend themselves nicely to the mood of the game He also praised Tallarico s score writing that it added a ton to the impact of the graphics and the mood of each level Sackenheim concluded While it may not have been the best looking action platformer around it could definitely give any other game a run for its money 14 Jeuxvideo reviewed the game in 2010 praising the soundtrack and controls 4 References edit a b c d e Mellerick Paul January 1994 Terminator CD Mega United Kingdom pp 44 45 a b c d e f Connolly Julian February 1994 Terminator CD MegaTech United Kingdom pp 64 66 a b c d Sega CD ProReview The Terminator GamePro United States June 1993 pp 64 65 a b c d Test The Terminator Jeuxvideo com in French November 10 2010 Retrieved 16 August 2021 a b Terminator CD Sega Power United Kingdom July 1993 pp 16 17 Horowitz Ken 1 June 2005 Interview Tommy Tallarico Composer Sega 16 Archived from the original on 30 January 2020 The Terminator instruction manual US Virgin Games 1993 p 19 Millsap Zack 6 February 2021 How Tommy Tallarico and the Terminator Revolutionized Video Game Music Forever CBR Retrieved 16 August 2021 Tommy Tallarico Retro Gamer 10 February 2015 Retrieved 16 August 2021 The Terminator Sega CD preview GameFan April 1993 pp 18 19 The Terminator Sega CD preview GameFan May 1993 p 34 a b c d The Terminator Sega CD review GameFan February 1994 pp 42 43 Shoot Em Eps Mega United Kingdom January 1994 p 87 a b Sackenheim Shawn The Terminator Sega CD Review AllGame Archived from the original on 15 November 2014 Mega CD Review The Terminator Consoles in French France April 1994 pp 112 113 a b c d The Terminator Sega CD Game Players May 1994 p 124 Le Terminator Frappe Encore Encore Joypad in French France April 1994 pp 98 100 Terminator Player One in French France April 1994 pp 98 99 a b T 800 is back Video Games in German Germany March 1994 p 76 a b The Terminator Game Power in Italian Italy March 1994 pp 76 77 Terminator MegaForce in French France April 1994 pp 76 79 a b c d e Pettengale Paul February 1994 The Terminator Sega Power United Kingdom pp 74 75 a b c d Roberts David February 1994 Terminator CD Sega Zone United Kingdom p 63 The Terminator Supersonic in French France April 1994 pp 16 17 External links editThe Terminator at MobyGames Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Terminator Sega CD video game amp oldid 1182956369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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