Gun Frontier (video game)
is a 1990 vertically scrolling shooter arcade video game developed and originally published by Taito in Japan and Europe. Set on the fictional planet of Gloria in the 22nd century, where an alien race of space pirates known as the Wild Lizards have invaded the location and enslaved its inhabitants for gold extraction, players assume the role of settlers who were part of the planet's colonization team taking control of revolver-shaped fighter aircraft in an attempt to overthrow the invaders and free their surviving civilization from slavery.
Conceived by Takatsuna Senba during his time working at Taito, which served as his first original work under the role of both designer and producer, Gun Frontier became one of the several projects created to promote the then-newly released Taito F2 System hardware and had a turbulent development cycle, undergoing through various changes before its eventual launch to the market. Initially launched for the arcades, the game was later ported to the Sega Saturn by GOO! and published exclusively in Japan by Xing Entertainment on 25 September 1997 as part of their Arcade Gear series of releases for the console, and it has since been re-released through compilations such as Taito Legends 2 across various platforms in 2006, with each one featuring several changes compared to the original version. The title is dedicated to F2 System hardware engineer Katsujiro Fujimoto, who died during development in an accident.
Gun Frontier has been met with mixed critical reception from video game magazines and dedicated outlets since its initial launch in arcades and later on the Saturn. Despite garnering mixed response from the audience, Senba and some of the members in the development team would go on to create a horizontally scrolling shooter for Taito after its release; Metal Black, which was produced under the internal working title "Project Gun Frontier 2", although its actual connection to the original entry is very loose. Battle Garegga and Recca programmer Shinobu Yagawa has since referred it as one of his favorites titles.
Gameplay
Gun Frontier is a space western-themed vertically scrolling shoot 'em up game. Players assume the role of planetary settlers who formed part in the colonization team of planet Gloria taking control of revolver-shaped fighter aircraft through six stages, in a last-ditch effort to defeat the Wild Lizards and free their surviving people from enslavement by the space pirates. Players start with dual machine guns which are strengthened and multiplied by upgrades that come in the form of US dimes taken from buffalo-shaped enemies and every five dimes empowers the aircraft's firepower. Players also start with a set number of bombs that can be upgraded to deal further destruction against enemies and scenery by collecting gold bars from destroyed ground forces and once a player accumulates 25 bombs, they are granted access to the Bomber Max, the strongest of the player's bombs.The direction of the blast radius of the player's bombs correspond to their movement. If the player moves their plane to the lower right of the screen and launches their bombs, then the direction the bomb will travel in the opposite direction of the aircraft's movement. This feature can only be used however when a player has a large bomb count as only having one or two bombs will result in a small directionless explosion and like most bombs found in other shoot 'em ups released at the time, the bombs also work as a shield against incoming enemy fire. Bombing on determined locations is also crucial for reaching high-scores to obtain extra lives, as certain setpieces in some stages hosts a bonus secret within their scenery, as well as destroying enemies on certain spots.
The recovery system after using a credit during the continue screen, as players can pick up a spinning coin with two different sides: a silver side and a gold side. If the player collects the coin on its silver side, then the player merely gains another coin for their guns. However, if the player collects the coin on its gold side, then the player's firepower and bomb supply will be maximized to their full power. The game also uses a checkpoint system in which a downed single player will start off at the beginning of the checkpoint they managed to reach before dying. The title also employs an anti-autofire mechanism where the difficulty will max out by the second stage if the player is sustaining too fast of a fire rate. Getting hit by enemy fire will result in losing a live, as well as a penalty of decreasing the aircraft's weapon to one level and once all lives are lost, the game is over unless the player inserts more credits into the arcade machine to continue playing.
Plot
Gun Frontier takes place in a futuristic sci-fi setting during the 22nd century, where mankind has managed to expand into the stars beyond the Milky Way galaxy and have started to colonize uninhabited planets through different solar systems, among them being the Earthlike planet known as Gloria, which happened to harness an enormous natural supply of gold and this discovery would later proved to be pivotal in the emigration towards Gloria, so much that due to the expensive cost of reaching the location, immigrants would be impoverished but life on the planet thrived in an ambient similar to the American Old West and although they were poor, gold trading aided the Glorians in advancing their technology and knowledge a lot that talented inventors and engineers lived among the inhabitants. However, the Glorians were not the only living beings who were tempted by the abundance of gold on the planet, as an alien race of space pirates known as the Wild Lizards quickly invaded the location, decimating towns and enslaved those who survived the assault for the purpose of gold extraction. Two Glorian inventors who were part of the planet's development teams decided to strike back against the invading aliens by taking control of revolver-shaped fighter aircraft.Production
Development
The creation of Gun Frontier was helmed by Takatsuna Senba, a former anime animator whose previous game development works at Taito included Battle Shark, Darius II and Master of Weapon, becoming his first original project under the role of both designer and producer. Deeming it as an "important mission" for him, Senba initially presented a game design document of more than 200 pages that took a month to prepare in order to get the project approved, however, the executives at Taito rejected the proposal several times before it was eventually approved but with a lower budget than when it was originally pitched to the company. Despite the low budget the project would be approved with, Senba and his team were tasked on creating a shoot 'em up game that featured a level of quality akin to an in-house project but with a budget that would have been taken to outsource it under a deadline, which could potentially laid the groundwork for future shoot 'em ups from Taito if the team were capable of performing such task, in addition of being one of the many titles made to promote the then-newly released Taito F2 System arcade hardware.Members of the Gun Frontier development team, which was originally a small number of people, also worked previously on other Taito titles such as Cadash, with Senba and his crew wanting to push the F2 System hardware as much as they could but the project would go through a turbulent development cycle until it was released. None of the members within the team had experience on designing a shoot 'em up project and the crew had yet to be familiarized with the F2 System to make the project a reality, while Senba was later tasked with working on '. Due to his experience with Darius II, Senba and the development crew were constantly struggling in getting the game as optimized as possible when creating graphics and sprites in order to not exceed the memory limit, with members using calculators to constantly check if such limit was reached or not, while also slowly learning how to harness the F2 System's capabilities and keeping the budget below what Majestic Twelve originally cost to produce.
Senba also played a part in Gun Frontiers development as an artist and created the waterfall setpiece seen in the second stage, as he stated in a 2006 interview that this setpiece alone proved to be very difficult for him to implement in the game, since the management division at Taito were very persistent in having the scene featured and the project was on the verge of being put on hold for this. As such, he worked under very high temperatures that threatened to wipe out data from the computers before overheating during summer, in addition of other tasks as well but the scene managed to be integrated and the project continued to move forward. Hiroyasu Nagai also worked as an artist for the project as well.
Despite suffering many setbacks, the game managed to meet the deadline and was eventually launched to the market. After its release, Senba recounted about the creation process of the project in a 1991 interview with Japanese publication Micom BASIC Magazine'' where he revealed additional development information as well as various game ideas that were implemented. He stated that the reason for adding an anti-autofire mechanism was due to the programmers' thought of how to make a project with adjustable difficulty on the fly, while also revealing the difficulty could also be increased by the number of enemies destroyed and other factors. He also revealed that the team implemented bonus secrets in some of the stages as an internal response from two Taito employees who managed to one-credit clear the game for longevity reasons before launch. The title is dedicated to F2 System hardware engineer Katsujiro Fujimoto, who died during development in a traffic accident.