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Gain Ground[lower-alpha 1] is a 1988 action-strategy arcade game later ported to home systems.

Gain Ground
Developer(s)Sega
Sanritsu (Genesis, Master System)
Publisher(s)Sega
Renovation Products (Genesis)
Designer(s)Mac Austin
Yang Watt
Programmer(s)Yoshiki Ōoka
Artist(s)Max Nelson
Composer(s)You Takada
Katsuhiro Hayashi
Platform(s)Arcade, Master System, Mega Drive/Genesis, TurboGrafx-CD
ReleaseArcade
  • JP: October 22, 1988[1]
  • WW: Late 1988
Master System
  • PAL: 1991
Mega Drive/Genesis
  • JP: January 3, 1991
  • NA: May 1991[2]
  • PAL: 1991
Genre(s)Action, strategy,
real-time tactical shooter
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer
Arcade systemSega System 24

Gameplay


Arcade version screenshot
Arcade version screenshot

In Gain Ground, players control one of a set of characters at a time, each with different weapons. To beat a level, players must reach the exit point with at least one character or destroy all enemies on the level before time runs out. There are forty levels in the arcade version of the game. The Master System and the Genesis/Mega Drive have fifty levels in the game.

Normal mode starts with three players. There are captive characters littered across all levels, which can be rescued by walking over, then escorting the controlled character to the exit point. If a player controlled character is killed, that character turns into a captive, except that they will disappear if the next active player controlled character dies, exits the level without them, or the player has no characters left in their party. In Hard mode, the player starts the game with all twenty characters, but all the captive characters are removed from the levels.

The game is over when all controlled characters in the party are killed without any reaching the exit. However, there are three continues which allow a player to restart the level with their original three characters.

The game consists out of four rounds, each having ten stages, where tenth stage is a boss level. There are also ten completely new levels added to the Genesis/Mega Drive version, this Modern Epoch takes place in the streets of the city.

There are twenty playable characters in Gain Ground, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. Each character has a minor, weak weapon which can be fired in any direction, and a special weapon which has different capabilities from the normal attack and which varies between characters.

The characters in Gain Ground also vary in which hand they hold their weapons, making it easier for some characters to shoot around certain walls and obstacles than others. When selecting a character for a situation, one must consider the character's speed, weapon type and range, and with which hands they hold their weapons.


Plot


From a Gain Ground flyer:

A long period of peace has deprived the earthlings of their instinct to wage war. The Federated Government, greatly concerned regarding this ever increasing dangerous situation, developed a Gain Ground simulation system in the year 2348 in an effort to instigate their ever waning fighting spirit However, suddenly without warning, the Supercomputer went berserk and took many of the citizens as hostages. In order to rescue the POWs, three of the bravest warriors were urgently dispatched to go forth into the deadly Gain Ground.


Release


Gain Ground started off as an arcade game. Released in Japan, the United States and Canada in 1988, Gain Ground ran on the Sega System 24 architecture. The developers have stated that their original inspiration was Gauntlet.[3] Gain Ground was ported to the Sega Master System in 1990 and the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis in 1991. Renovation Products released the Genesis version in North America. Both conversions were handled by Sanritsu. In 1992, a PC Engine Super CD-ROM² version (Gain Ground SX) was released by NEC Avenue.

It was re-released in Radica Games' TVPlay Legends Vol. II TV Games compilation. In 2004, the game was remade for the PlayStation 2 as part of Sega's Japan-only Sega Ages 2500 series as Sega Ages 2500 Series Vol. 9: Gain Ground.[4] The Mega Drive/Genesis version was released on the European and Australian Wii Virtual Console on February 2, 2007, and was made available in North America on February 5, 2007. Gain Ground was included in Sega Genesis Collection on the PlayStation 2 and the PSP in 2006 and in Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 in 2009. On June 1, 2010, the game became available on Steam as part of Sega Mega Drive Classics Pack (Sega Genesis Classics in the United States). On May 29, 2018, it was included in the console version of the Mega Drive/Genesis Classics Pack.

As a tribute to the game, Chapter 15 and 17 of the crossover game Project X Zone are stages directly pulled from Gain Ground. Chapter 15's title is "Gain Ground System" and both stages even have the party rescuing three of their companions (two in the first and one in the second) in true fashion to the original game. Incidentally, no characters from Gain Ground actually appear in the crossover.


Reception


Game Machine reports that Gain Ground was among the most popular arcade games of February 1989.[12]

IGN's Levi Buchanan ranked Gain Ground as the fifth top Renovation game.[13] Complex ranked Gain Ground 88th on their "The 100 Best Sega Genesis Games."[14]


Notes


  1. Japanese: ゲイングランド, Hepburn: Gein Gurando

References


  1. "Gain Ground (Registration Number PA0000409803)". United States Copyright Office. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  2. "MegaPlay_US_04.pdf" (PDF).
  3. "Hardcore Gaming 101". Archived from the original on 2015-04-08. Retrieved 2015-03-28.
  4. Sega Ages: Gain Ground Archived 2011-05-13 at the Wayback Machine, IGN, July 20, 2004.
  5. "Gain Ground Review". 2007-02-08. Archived from the original on 2015-10-20. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  6. "File:Raze UK 08.pdf - Sega Retro". Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  7. "File:Raze UK 07.pdf - Sega Retro". Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  8. "Software A-Z: Master System". Console XS. No. 1 (June/July 1992). United Kingdom: Paragon Publishing. 23 April 1992. pp. 137–47.
  9. MegaTech rating, EMAP, issue 6, page 78, June 1992
  10. "Sega-16 – Gain Ground". Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  11. "File:SegaPro UK 03.pdf - Sega Retro".
  12. "Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - テーブル型TVゲーム機 (Table Videos)". Game Machine (in Japanese). No. 349. Amusement Press. 1 February 1989. p. 25.
  13. Top 10 Renovation Games Archived 2012-02-14 at the Wayback Machine, IGN, June 17, 2008.
  14. Concepcion, Miguel (April 11, 2018). "The 100 Best Sega Genesis Games". Complex. Retrieved 2022-01-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)





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