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F-Zero GX

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F-Zero GX
File:F-zero-gx.jpg
Box art for the North American version of F-Zero GX
Developer(s)SEGA / Amusement Vision
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Designer(s)Shigeru Miyamoto (producer)
Toshihiro Nagoshi (producer)
Takaya Imamura (supervisor)
EngineHeavily modified Super Monkey Ball engine[1]
Platform(s)Nintendo GameCube
ReleaseJP July 25 2003
NA August 26 2003
EU October 31 2003
Genre(s)Futuristic racing game
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

F-Zero GX (エフゼロ ジーエックス, Efu Zero Jī Ekkusu, F-ZERO GX) is a futuristic racing video game for the Nintendo GameCube console. Developed by Sega's Amusement Vision department, it was released in Japan, Europe and North America, in 2003.[2] Its arcade counterpart, F-Zero AX, was developed in conjunction between Nintendo, Namco, and Sega. F-Zero GX/AX runs on a heavily modified version of the engine that powered Super Monkey Ball.[1] F-Zero GX is ranked as one of the best futuristic racing games to date according to Game Rankings.[3]

F-Zero GX is the fifth installment in the F-Zero series and the successor to F-Zero X. The game continues the series difficult, high-speed racing style, retaining the basic gameplay and control system from the Nintendo 64 title. A heavy emphasis is placed on track memorization and reflexes, which aids in completing the title.[4][5] GX also introduces a "story mode" element, where the player walks in the footsteps of Captain Falcon through nine chapters while completing various missions.

Gameplay

F-Zero GX is a futuristic racing game where over thirty pilots race inside plasma-powered hovercars in an intergalactic Grand Prix at speeds that can exceed over 2000 km/h. The game is noteworthy for its visuals, intense action, high level of difficulty and for its very high sense of speed.[6] Tracks include loops, half-pipes, cylinders, and jumps. Some courses have innate obstacles like dirt patches, mines, tricky jumps, and magnetic tubes to navigate.[6] Before a race, the player is able to adjust a vehicle's balance between maximum acceleration and maximum top speed. This adds strategy,[7] as players with greater knowledge of the circuits can make better decisions. There is a wide range of machines available for the player to choose, each with its own characteristics, including varying levels of Top Speed, Grip, Boost, and Body, and each driven by a different character. Custom machines can also be created.

A race in F-Zero GX consists of three laps around the track. Each machine has an energy meter, which serves two purposes. First, it is a measurement of the machine's health and is decreased when the machine hits another racer or the side of the track. Second, the player is given the ability to boost after the first lap. Boosting greatly increases the racer's speed, but also drains their energy. Energy can be replenished by driving over recharge strips that are placed on the track. If a player falls off a track or runs out of energy, the race will be restarted, or their machine will be restored to the track with half depleted energy. As with all F-Zero titles, combat is not a crucial part of the game, but machines can attempt to damage and destroy each other using side or spin attacks.

F-Zero GX includes several different modes.[8] In the Grand Prix mode, the player chooses a grand prix circuit and races against twenty-nine opponents through each track in that circuit. Players get a certain amount of points for finishing a track depending on where they placed, and the winner of the circuit is the character who receives the most total points. There are three difficulty levels available at the start: Novice, Standard, and Expert. Master difficulty can be unlocked by beating the Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald cups on Expert. Placing first in a cup on Master difficulty with a non-custom machine unlocks an FMV featuring that machine's pilot.

File:F-Zero GX.jpg
F-Zero GX is regarded as one of the best looking GameCube titles.

The Vs. Battle is the multiplayer mode where two to four players can compete simultaneously. Time Attack lets the player choose a track and complete it in the shortest time possible. Ghost data can be saved to a Memory Card, racing against a staff ghost or transparent re-enactments of the player's best three-lap performances is possible. Up to five ghosts can be shown at a time. A new Story mode allows the player to follow Captain Falcon as he races through missions and completes a wide array of challenges. The replay mode allows saved replays to be viewed under different camera angles and music. Customize is where items such as pilots and machine parts can be bought. Practice allows the player to practice any track with an adjustable amount of laps and opponents.[8] Each character's biography, theme music, as well as information on their machine is located in the Pilot Profile mode. Unlocked character movies can also be viewed here.

There is also an Internet ranking system whereby players will enter a password on the Internet and will get ranked based on their position in the database. Players can receive a password after completing a race, write it down, go an enter it into a webpage database, and it will track their time and the machine they've used.[9]

Customize mode

The new "customize mode" allows the player to create emblems to place on the machines and buy items and use a variety of them in many ways. Buy parts to customize a machine that range from extremely heavy to extremely light ones, in-game sounds, unlockable pilots, circuits and finally "staff ghosts" that players can try to beat - these ghosts do particularly fast runs on tracks and are exceedingly difficult. All of these things, once unlocked, are purchased using "tickets", which the player wins by completing one of the five Grand Prix Cups (Ruby, Sapphire, Emerald, Diamond, and AX) or story missions, or by achieving specific minimum times in time trial mode (which also unlocks that track's Staff Ghost).[10][11]

Techniques

After properly navigating out of banked turns, the game's physics modeling allows F-Zero machines to get a boost of acceleration if it has high grip, high acceleration and/or heavy weight. Players can exploit F-Zero GX's finely tuned physics model to simulate special boosts caused by correctly leaning into curves using the controller's shoulder buttons. This can be done easily on a wide straight stretch of a circuit to generate movements likened to actual snakes.[12] These back and forth snake-like movements set a high rate of oscillation, achieving speeds of over 3,000 km/h. This technique, called "dakou" or snaking, has been known to deliver a massive increase in speed,[13] but it is best used on the early, easier tracks and when racing alone in Time Trial.[14] It is an extremely challenging technique to employ (the constant back-and-forth motion wreaks utter havoc with traditional steering), not to mention a painful one; players can find their hands aching after just a few minutes of snaking.[15][16] Because this gives the user a distinct speed advantage over other, "non-snaking" opponents, players regard snaking in general as anything from legitimate and advanced racing strategy, to an unfair tactic, or even outright cheating.[13][17] According to Nintendo, the snake technique was an intentional addition to gameplay.[14]

Another technique, called "flying", allows the player to finish many courses with higher than usual speed records. It requires high speed, and either a jump plate, a siderail that bumps vehicles into the air, or an open drop in the course that can be used to fall off and quickly turn around in the air. Airtime is limited, but more time can be gained from higher launch speeds. It can set a player to stay ahead of the pack for an entire race. Perfect positioning in the air sometimes allows the player to escape death and fall through the map, which causes them to reappear at the top of the map and land on the air, but it still counts as a finish.

"Snake flying" is a combination of snake and flight. One "snakes" to maximum speed, sometimes reaching into the upper regions of the 4,000 km/h mark, and then launches. Launches allow for extremely high altitudes, resulting in increased flight time, useful for exploration or for using launch areas that are too far away from the start gate for normal flight laps.[15]

Finally, "suicide finishes" allow a broken vehicle to finish. An intentional explosion just before the finish line, if properly timed, allows broken down vehicles to slide past the line on momentum alone. There is no use for this other than being a sometimes challenging novelty. Suicide launches are performed by hitting a wall at extreme speed with no shields. Vehicles are then blasted far beyond the circuit, where it becomes apparent that the course is a small area floating in an empty space.[15]

Story

The new story mode lets the player race as Captain Falcon in nine chapters of various non-standard racing scenarios, such as Falcon's training regiment, a battle against a rival's gang, an escape from a collapsing building through closing blast doors under a narrow time limit, and the F-Zero Grand Prix race against 29 other veteran pilots. Each chapter can be completed in three difficulty levels, each of which unlocks an item in the game's shop: "Normal," which unlocks the next chapter; "Hard," which unlocks parts from the arcade version, F-Zero AX; and "Very Hard," which unlocks driver-specific vehicles from F-Zero AX.[18] Toshihiro Nagoshi, one of the game's co-producers, stated that this mode was included because the development team felt that the F-Zero universe was unique and they wanted to explain some of the characters' motivations and flesh out the game world.[9]

Circuits

Though GX has more tracks than its predecessor F-Zero X, there is no longer a code to unlock them all, which means that some will never see more than the first 15 tracks. Furthermore, the "X Cup" (which randomly generates tracks) was removed in GX. There are four "GX cups" in the game with five tracks each. Initially only the Ruby, Sapphire and Emerald Cups can be played. Diamond Cup can be unlocked by coming first overall in Ruby, Sapphire and Emerald Cup on standard or expert difficulty in the Grand Prix. Beating the first three cups on Expert also unlocks the Master class difficulty level. Individual AX tracks can be unlocked by placing first on the tracks in the arcade (F-Zero AX) version of the game and saving progress to a memory card. Placing first overall in the other four cups on the Master difficulty setting also unlocks five of the six AX Cup tracks for purchase using tickets. The sixth, which is the 26th and last track in the game, Mute City: Sonic Oval, can be unlocked by placing first in the AX Cup on any difficulty level.[11]

# Ruby Cup Sapphire Cup Emerald Cup Diamond Cup AX Cup
1 Mute City - Twist Road Big Blue - Drift Highway Fire Field - Cylinder Knot Cosmo Terminal - Trident Aeropolis - Screw Drive
2 Casino Palace1 - Split Oval Port Town - Aero Dive Green Plant - Intersection Sand Ocean - Lateral Shift Outer Space - Meteor Storm
3 Sand Ocean - Surface Slide Green Plant - Mobius Ring Casino Palace1 - Double Branches Fire Field - Undulation Port Town - Cylinder Wave
4 Lightning - Loop Cross Port Town - Long Pipe Lightning - Half Pipe Aeropolis - Dragon Slope Lightning - Thunder Road
5 Aeropolis - Multiplex Mute City - Serial Gaps Big Blue - Ordeal Phantom Road - Slim-Line Slits Green Plant - Spiral
6 Mute City - Sonic Oval2

1Called "Vegas Palace" in the Japanese version.[19] 2Not available in Grand Prix.

Development

In March 2002, Nintendo announced that an arcade board under the name of Triforce was being developed in conjunction between Nintendo, Namco, and Sega. The first game announced for the hardware was the sequel F-Zero AX-GX. Development was taking place at Sega's subsidiary Amusement Visions with cooperation from Nintendo. The game was split up into two different versions: F-Zero AX and F-Zero GX. F-Zero AX was the arcade exclusive version which featured its own six tracks and exclusive ten vehicles. The exclusive home console version F-Zero GX, would not feature the moving cabinet that F-Zero AX did, but it featured a larger set of pilots and tracks.[20]

Nintendo revealed the first footage of F-Zero GX at the Pre- press conference on May 21, 2002. The title was in development by Sega's Amusement Vision development firm for both the Nintendo home console and the upcoming arcade Triforce hardware. While the game was known to exist several months prior, it had remained behind closed doors until that conference.[21]

At E³ 2003, Nagoshi was hoping that they would have that time to include a LAN multiplayer mode. But they chose not to actually support a LAN mode in F-Zero GX. He stated "Once you include a mode like that the multiplayer mode becomes the focus of gameplay. With F-Zero, we're more focused on the single-player game. That's the main reason we've not included it this time."[9]

Hidenori Shoji, Daiki Kasho and Alan Brey composed a soundtrack for GX and its arcade counterpart called, F-Zero GX/AX Original Soundtrack. It was released on July 22, 2004, in Japan by Scitron Digital Content.

Critical reception and sales

Reviews
Publication Score Comment
Famitsu
32 of 40
IGN
9.3 of 10
Editor's Choice
Game Informer
8.25 of 10
GamePro
4.5 of 5
Editor's Choice
EGM
7.83 of 10
GameSpy
82 of 100
GameSpot
8.6 of 10
Best GameCube Driving Game[22]
Nintendo Power
4.9 of 5
NGC Magazine
93%
Compilations of multiple reviews
Game Rankings
89 of 100 (based on 80 reviews)[3]
Game Ratio
88% (based on 40 reviews)
Metacritic
89 of 100 (based on 50 reviews)[23]

F-Zero GX has been credited for its visuals;[6][4] arcade/home connectivity; plenty of longevity; sharp controls; tough challenge; fleshed-out single-player modes.[6] The game is the highest-rated racing game on GameCube,[22][24] and is considered one of the best futuristic racing games to date.[3] The editors of Game Rankings have also declared F-Zero GX as the highest-ranking futuristic racing game of all time by compiling every major numeric review given to the game upon its release.[3] 1UP.com stated that the series is "finally running on hardware that can do it proper justice."[25]

The game's most common criticism is its difficulty, particularly in the game's story mode.[4][25] GameSpot thought "the extreme increase in difficulty will surely turn some people away before they've seen the 20 tracks and unlocked all the story mode chapters."[4] GameSpy mentioned that "purists may find it too similar to N64 version" and criticizes the lack of LAN play.[6]

During its first week in Japan, F-Zero GX sold 40,000 copies.[26] The game sold over 250,000 copies in both Europe and North America, allowing it to be included in the Player's Choice line.[27][28]

F-Zero AX connectivity

The game's memory cards, on which saved games are kept, can be taken to an arcade with F-Zero AX, the game's arcade counterpart, to download special data. Players are meant to use the AX arcade cabinets to unlock permanent access to the fifth and last cup, the AX Cup; a number of new custom machine parts and ten new vehicles. This is easier said than done, as AX cabinets are quite rare; according to a fan-compiled F-Zero AX Locations database, less than twenty are available in the North America region.[29] However, more can be located and its content can instead be unlocked in F-Zero GX or use of a cheating device. In GX, the AX Cup can be unlocked by completing all other cups (Ruby, Sapphire, Emerald and Diamond) on Master difficulty, the vehicles by completing Story Mode missions on Very Hard difficulty and the custom parts by completing Story Mode on Hard difficulty.[11][10]

References

  1. ^ a b Allen, Mat. "F-Zero GX review". ntsc-uk.com. Retrieved 2006-10-22.
  2. ^ "F-Zero GX dates". GameSpot. Retrieved 2006-12-12.
  3. ^ a b c d "F-Zero GX reviews". gamerankings.com. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
  4. ^ a b c d Gerstmann, Jeff (2003-08-25). "F-Zero GX review". gamespot.com. Retrieved 2007-01-16. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ Boot, Justin (2005-11-12). "F-Zero GX review". thunderboltgames.com. Retrieved 2007-03-05. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ a b c d e Williams, Bryn (2003-08-28). "F-Zero GX (GCN) review". GameSpy.com. Retrieved 2006-10-15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ "Game Information". Nintendo Europe. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
  8. ^ a b (2003) Nintendo: F-Zero GX instruction manual (in English). Sega.
  9. ^ a b c IGN Staff (2003-07-08). "F-Zero Press Conference". IGN.com. Retrieved 2006-11-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) Cite error: The named reference "Conference" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  10. ^ a b Peer "Dark" Schneider. "F-Zero GX Customization". IGN.com. Retrieved 2006-10-24.
  11. ^ a b c Peer "Dark" Schneider. "F-Zero GX Secrets". IGN.com. Retrieved 2006-10-24.
  12. ^ Peer "Dark" Schneider. "Tips & Techniques". ign.com. Retrieved 2006-11-04.
  13. ^ a b Casamassina, Matt (2003-08-22). "F-Zero GX review". ign.com. Retrieved 2007-01-17. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  14. ^ a b IGN Staff (2003-08-06). "10 Biggest Rumors on GameCube". ign.com. Retrieved 2007-01-17. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  15. ^ a b c Metroid Killer. "F-Zero GX Techniques". Smashboards.com. Retrieved 2006-10-24.
  16. ^ "F-Zero GX Hints & Cheats". gamespot.com. Retrieved 2007-01-17.
  17. ^ NOA Andy (2006-01-05). "I'm a Low-Down Dirty Snaker and Darn Proud of It". {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  18. ^ Peer "Dark" Schneider. "F-Zero GX story guide". IGN.com. Retrieved 2006-10-24.
  19. ^ "Official Japanese site". {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  20. ^ "F-Zero GX/AX first announcements". N-Sider.com. Retrieved 2006-10-16.
  21. ^ IGN Staff (2002-05-21). "E3 2002: F-Zero GCN Videos". IGN.com. Retrieved 2006-10-19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  22. ^ a b "GameSpot's 2003 Best GameCube Driving Game". gamespot.com. Retrieved 2006-03-10.
  23. ^ "F-Zero GX reviews". metacritic.com. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
  24. ^ Kaehler, Justin (2005-10-07). "Top 10 Racing Games - GameCube Editon!". IGN.com. Retrieved 2007-03-05. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  25. ^ a b "F-Zero GX review". 1Up.com. 2004-05-09. Retrieved 2006-10-15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  26. ^ Bramwell, Tom (2003-08-04). "Japan Charts: Tokyo Xtreme Racer 01 streaks away". GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved 2007-01-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  27. ^ IGN Staff (2004-03-16). "Mario Golf, F-Zero Go Bargain-Priced". Retrieved 2007-01-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  28. ^ Adams, David (2004-10-14). "Fun gets cheaper in Europe". Retrieved 2007-01-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  29. ^ "F-Zero AX Database". {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)