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Battle City | Table of Contents | Walkthrough
Table of Contents
Battle City | |
---|---|
Japanese title | バトルシティー |
Developer(s) | Namco |
Publisher(s) | Namco |
Distributor(s) | Wii Virtual Console |
Release date(s) | September 9, 1985
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Genre(s) | Action |
System(s) | Famicom, Game Boy, Fujitsu FM-7, Wii |
Players | 1-2 |
Preceded by | Tank Battalion |
Followed by | Tank Force |
Twitch | Battle City Channel |
Search | |
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Battle City is a Famicom game that Namco made as an improvement over an older arcade title of theirs: Tank Battalion. While Tank Battalion was very blocky with minimal graphics and rough animation, Battle City spruced things up a bit with more graphical variation, an assortment of enemy tanks, power-ups, and smooth sprite movement. Namco did this once before with Warpman, which was an improved version of Warp-Warp.
In both Tank Battalion and Battle City (and its eventual sequel Tank Force), the object is simple: protect your home base from the onslaught of enemy tanks. Your base, signified by a falcon, starts out safely behind a fortified wall. But it only takes a few bullets from your enemies (or yourself) to blow a hole in the wall, making your base vulnerable to attack. In fact, all brick walls can be destroyed in this fashion. All you can do to prevent this is destroy every tank as fast as possible. Some tanks provide you with valuable power-ups when they are destroyed, such as faster shots or shields. You can see a tally of how many of the 20 tanks remain on a stage before you advance to the next. There are 35 stages in total.
After being released for the Famicom, it was converted into an arcade game called Vs. Battle City using the Nintendo Vs. arcade technology. In 1991, Nova ported the game to the Game Boy, adding 65 more stages to bring the stage count up to 100. However, the reduced screen size resulted in only a portion of the maze being shown so a radar was incorporated into the game. Namco later included the game in their Super Game Boy compatible compilation Namco Gallery Vol. 1. Battle City has made one more appearance since then, in the Japanese version of the Nintendo GameCube title Star Fox: Assault as a hidden bonus game, along with other classic Namco titles Xevious and Star Luster.
![Army Army](http://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/s--YFrwi4Gg--/18wps3v3r6v86jpg.jpg)
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Story[edit]
You are the last member of your army's elite tank commanders, with no choice but to defend your fortress against an entire army of enemy tanks bent on your base's destruction. Break holes through the walls and situate yourself strategically to remove the enemy as quickly as possible, but stay out of their line of fire, and don't let them shoot your base down.
Table of Contents
Gameplay summary[edit]
- You start out at the bottom of the screen next to your base. Enemy tanks will appear from one of three positions at the top of the screen.
- In each stage, there are 20 tanks in total you must defeat in order to advance to the next stage.
- You can fire in four directions. Most tanks only require one hit to destroy them. One type of tank requires four hits.
- If one enemy bullet hits you, you lose one life. If your base is ever hit by a bullet, the game is automatically over.
- Bullets can destroy walls, whether they are fired by you or the enemy. It takes four shots to break through a standard width wall.
- Enemy tanks that flash red provide power-ups whenever hit. The power up will appear randomly somewhere on the screen.
Gallery[edit]
In addition to being released on the Famicom, Battle City was later ported to the Game Boy as a stand-alone title, and later as part of the Namco Gallery Vol. 1 compilation, which was compatible with the Super Game Boy. It was also released for the Japanese only Fujitsu FM-77 home computer.
- Famicom title screen
- FM-77 box
- FM-77 title screen
- Game Boy box
- Game Boy title screen
- Namco Gallery Vol. 1 box
- Super Game Boy title screen
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NES gamepad:Gamepad control:Player 1:Player 2:↑↑-↓↓-←←-→→-AZ-BX-SELECTShift-STARTEnter-Emulator selection:The following emulators are available for this game: (JavaScript), (Flash), (JS) and (Java).Other platforms:This game can be played also in a version for. We are working on the others.Game info:box coverGame title:Battle CityConsole:Author (released):Namco (1985)Genre:Shooter, StrategyMode:MultiplayerDesign:Ryoichi Ohkubo, Takefumi Hyoudou, Dempa ShimbunshaMusic:Junko Ozawa, Norihiko TogashiGame manual:not availableDownload:not available (stream only)Game size:24 kBRecommended emulator:From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:Battle City is a multi-directional shooter video game for the Family Computer produced and published in 1985 by Namco. It is a successor to Namco's 1980 Tank Battalion, and would be succeeded itself by the 1991 Tank Force. An arcade version for the Nintendo VS. System would follow, and the game would eventually end up in the Japanese version of Star Fox Assault (a Namco-produced game). There was also a related Game Boy game of the same name.The player, controlling a tank, must destroy enemy tanks in each level, which enter the playfield from the top of the screen. The enemy tanks attempt to destroy the player's base (represented on the map as a bird, eagle or Phoenix), as well as the human tank itself.
A level is completed when the player destroys all 20 enemy Tanks, but the game ends if the player's base is destroyed or the player loses all available lives. Battle City contains 35 different stages that are 13 units wide by 13 units high. Each map contains different types of terrain and obstacles. Examples include brick walls that can be destroyed by having either the player's Tank or an enemy Tank shoot at them, steel walls that can be destroyed by the player if he has collected three or more power-up stars, bushes that hide Tanks under them, ice fields that make it difficult to control Tank and pools of water which cannot be crossed by Tanks.
There are four progressively harder types of enemy Tanks. The game becomes more challenging in later levels, as enemy Tanks may act as decoys to lure players away from their base so that another Tank can destroy it. In addition, flashing Tanks could be destroyed for power-ups. There are several types of power-ups: Tank symbol gives an extra life, star improves player's Tank (having one star make shots faster, having two stars allow two simultaneous shots, having three stars allow the player to destroy steel), bomb destroys all visible enemy Tanks, clock freezes all enemy Tanks for a period of time, shovel adds steel walls around the base for a period of time and shield makes player's Tank invulnerable to attack for a period of time. Battle City was one of the earlier games to allow two players to play simultaneously.
Both players have to defend the base together, and if one player shoots the other, the friendly fire victim would be unable to move for a while (but can still shoot). It was also one of the first NES games to allow players access to an edit mode where they could create custom levels, though these custom levels cannot be saved unlike in similar modes such as the one in Excitebike.
The Game Boy version is more challenging, as the screen is too small to display the whole map and only enough to display one part of it; for this reason, a radar was added.More details about this game can be found on.For fans and collectors:Find this game on video server or.Buy original game or NES console at, or.The newest version of this game can be purchased on,or.Videogame Console:This version of Battle City was designed for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), which was an eight-bit video game console manufacturedby Nintendo in the years 1983 - 2003. In that time, it was the best-selling video game console for which more than 700 licensed games and a number of non-licensedgames were created. Worldwide, approximately 62 million units of this console were sold at approximately price $ 100 per unit.
More information about theNES console can be found.Recommended Game Controllers:You can control this game easily by using the keyboard of your PC (see the table next to the game). However, for maximum gaming enjoyment, we strongly recommend using a USB gamepad that you simply plug into the USB port of your computer.
If you do not have a gamepad, buy a suitable USB controller in or in some of your favorite online stores.Available online emulators:5 different online emulators are available for Battle City. These emulators differ not only in the technology they use to emulate old games, but also in support of various game controllers, multiplayer mode, mobile phone touchscreen, emulation speed, absence or presence of embedded ads and in many other parameters. Formaximum gaming enjoyment, it's important to choose the right emulator, because on each PC and in different Internet browsers, the individual emulators behave differently.
The basicfeatures of each emulator available for this game Battle City are summarized in the following table:EmulatorTechnologyMultiplayerUSB gamepadTouchscreenWithout adsJavaScriptYESYESNONOFlashNOYESNOYESJavaScriptYESYESYESNOJavaScriptYESYESYESNOJava appletYESNONOYESSimilar games:Comments.
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