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Tech Romancer
 
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Tech Romancer

by SPIG
Sega Dreamcast Teen
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S. and to APO/FPO addresses. For APO/FPO shipments, please check with the manufacturer regarding warranty and support issues.
  • ASIN: B00004RC1W
  • Item Weight: 8 ounces
  • Media: Video Game
  • Release Date: June 16, 2000
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #26,524 in Video Games (See Top 100 in Video Games)

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Product Description

Product Description

If you love Japanese anime films featuring giant, crushing robots, here's your chance to control a massive mechanoid of your own. Tech Romancer brings larger-than-life robot fighting to the Dreamcast with slick 3-D animated characters set in beautifully rendered three-dimensional worlds. Graphically stimulating and insanely whimsical, this fighting game features an original animation movie, multiple hidden characters, and VMU minigames.

Tech Romancer includes four modes of play. Story mode is a one-player mode where players follow the story of each selected robot pilot. Hero challenge mode is a survival mode where players fight against 12 enemies and are given a ranking based on their performance. Versus mode is a one- or two-player game that allows players to battle against each other or the computer. Tatsumi technodome mode allows players to unlock hidden features, including bonus movies, game music, character bios, and even karaoke!

GameSpot Review

A few years back, Capcom circumvented convention, or at least the company's own convention, and released a little niche game in the arcades called Cyberbots. Cyberbots was a game that went largely unheralded outside of Japan and, for one reason or another, it was only released for the Sega Saturn and the PlayStation in its native country. More recently, Capcom circumvented convention again and released a little niche game in the Japanese arcades called Kikaioh: Tech Romancer. Built on the PlayStation-based System 12 board, it is Capcom's second major attempt at bringing a giant-robot-fighting game to the masses. This time, however, it's in 3D, and the cast is entirely new. Much more of a port to the high-powered Dreamcast than Capcom's other 3D fighter, Star Gladiator 2, ever was, Tech Romancer is a combination of great graphics and solid fighting fun. If you've ever gotten a kick out of watching giant-monster films, or you have had the fortune to see any number of Japanese children's shows (for example, Ultraman, Go Go Ranger, Kikiader, Mazinger Z, etc.), then you'll most likely dig Tech Romancer. While all the robots are Capcom "originals," they obviously borrow from some of the most famous giant robots Japan ever offered. Evangelion, Gundam, the aforementioned Mazinger Z, Macross, and even Giant Robo have a neo-representative in attendance. If you have a favorite brand of "real-life" robot, chances are you'll find something to like here. Initially available are nine robots, with Kikaioh being the lead robot and others like Diana 17, Bolon, Twinzen V, and Wise Duck being some of the other bots. Of course, your first job is to pick one, but depending on which robot you pick, you may also have to select a pilot, who will determine special attacks and configurations. Once past the initial obligations, you'll discover a fighting game that feels like a traditional Capcom fighter but also plays like a 3D game. The main controls offer a block button, a jump button, and two attack buttons. Although this seems rather sparse at first, you'll soon discover the variations that make this one of the most enjoyable fighters in the last few years. Unlike Capcom's usual six-button layout, Tech Romancer uses all four Dreamcast buttons, as well as the shoulder triggers. You have a jump and a block button, as well as two attack buttons. The left and right shoulder buttons control, respectively, supermove selection and a side-step/attack move. The backgrounds are 3D, and they feature 3D polygonal buildings, which crumble under heavy fire. Power-ups can be found inside said structures, and when you pick them up (by simply walking over them), you can choose which enhancement to use by pulling the left trigger. Among the items you can pick up are repair boxes, offense up, defense up, hero mode, and power-ups that enable character-specific moves. The Y button performs most of your hand-to-hand moves, while the B button usually results in a long-distance attack, although some robots will launch an additional close-range attack. Various combinations of these buttons (for example, both attack buttons, block plus both attack buttons, both attack buttons plus jump, and others) will launch superdestructive supermoves that fill the screen with all sorts of special effects. Tech Romancer may be the first 3D fighter to have as many over-the-top superattacks as it does normal moves. While the full list of attacks and superattacks is both impressive and large enough to keep even the nimblest FAQ writer busy for weeks, it's the final attacks that offer the wildest visuals. After you've drained an opponent of half his damage bar, you can execute a final attack - a move that, if successfully executed, will end the round in no uncertain terms. The downside is that the move is completely blockable or cancelable, and it must be timed right lest you leave yourself open to a counterattack. This can be useful for a comeback if you are close to dying, but you have managed to reduce your opponent's health enough to try a final attack.Bolon, the hodgepodge ball-shaped robot whose child-pilot is prone to bratty temper tantrums, can serve as a good example to describe a final attack. When you trigger her final attack, a large red curtain falls down and Pollin basically brings her opponent to a tea party. The antagonist always manages to insult Bolon/Pollin, who subsequently blows up the house of cards around them. Likewise, another of her lesser attacks shows Bolon throwing a minitrain and train track down to the ground. These items get underfoot and cause significant damage to the enemy. The attacks are wild and varied, and don't be surprised if your robot transforms, Veritech-fighter style. Other strategic moves - such as the power-break, which exposes turtlers to further attacks, and the steel-dash, which will also open up an opponent to a beating - are necessary to your survival. All of the robot designs are impressive, and they are considerably more memorable than Star Gladiator 2's palette swaps While playing Tech Romancer, you have two main options aside from the versus mode. Hero-challenge mode is a no-frills arcade mode that runs you through the gauntlet of robots, plus three bosses. The meat of the game is found in the story mode, which adds between-fight cinemas, multicharacter conversations, and even small animations. Each character also has his or her own individualized motif, designed to mirror different television shows. The character and robot you choose will determine which robots you encounter and, occasionally, which paths you choose between stages. Beating the game will also reward you in other ways, specifically in unlocking various hidden items. The graphics, originally modeled on the System 12 board, have been significantly improved. While not quite at the same level of Soul Calibur, they're certainly pumped up higher than the graphics in Star Gladiator 2. You'd be hard-pressed to find a glitch or a moment of polygon seaming anywhere, even during dramatic close-ups or screen-filling superattacks. While most people won't have seen the original arcade version of Tech Romancer, it's no overstatement to say that these stellar robot designs benefit from the move to the Dreamcast hardware. Other sundry effects also give Tech Romancer that extra level of detail that separates the good from the great. Great lighting effects are present, as are subtle 3D elements such as a starfleet hovering close by in one stage. Craters are also left behind when grenades and rockets scorch the earth. Sadly, the backdrops are little more than flat 2D bitmaps, which aren't as detailed or high in resolution as they could have been, thus lending a dioramic feel to the game. The sounds in Tech Romancer are all crystal clear and full of punch, ranging from explosions to laser cannons to robot hydraulics to the voice actors' quotes. Likewise, swords clashing, rocket-fists firing, and buildings crumbling all get the appropriate audio treatment. The music is classic Capcom, and if that's your thing, then you'll definitely enjoy the epic, yet cheesy, melodramatic Japanese action-show-style themes presented here. --James Mielke
--Copyright ©1998 GameSpot Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of GameSpot is prohibited.

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Tech Romancer features great gameplay!, July 8, 2000
By A Customer
= Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars  = Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars  = Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Tech Romancer (Video Game)
Here are some things about the game I feel really can make or break the game for you, the cautious buyer:

--T.R. relies heavily on the style of Japanese art known as anime. If you are fond of anime, know it, and love it, you WILL love this game. The anime features make the game unique. However, if you do not care for anime, you might scoff at the characters, music, and voices (all Japanese).

--The 3D fighting engine is superb and the detailed and highly interactive backrounds let you immerse into the realtiy that is this game. Biuldings can be destroyed, revealing very useful and diverse skills and power-ups, (so cool).

--Attacks are diverse...robots range from a robot constructed of stone to the latest Air Force technology to a robotic Sailor Moon. Moves are a blast, easy to do, and consist of bright colors and lights that make you giddy... oooh...

--Not TOO cartoony, but don't expect to be ripping off anyone's head in the midst of battle.

--When it comes to replay value... you WILL play this for a long time, the features take a while too earn, but are real fun. 3 secret characters, Vmu minigames (addictive), and so much variety.

If you want a fighting game that is serious strategy (it takes thought to win, don't just tap Y), like anime, or are being forced at gunpiont to buy this game, I recommend Tech Romancer. (OR you could just rent it and see for yourself!)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Giant robts beat the stuffing out of each other.More at 7, July 6, 2000
By A Customer
= Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars  = Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars  = Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Tech Romancer (Video Game)
Huge giant robots .huge giant flashy explosions. Huge giant comic book store owners all rushing to buy the game at once.Game play is generally good (well duh it's a fighting game),nice graphics and a cool finishing move for each character.but the feature i liked most was to watch the anime movie tech romancer!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I kinda want to repudiate the first Star Review..., October 10, 2004
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Tech Romancer (Video Game)
I respect the opinion of my fellow player and reviewer. However, he has made, what I feel, is a major mistake in opinion. He points out in the lower cons section that the characters are one dimensional and cliched. I need to say...WELL YAH!!!!

Tech Romancer is for that poor sad fool in us all that can't get enough giant robots crushing everything that moves and beating the stuffing out of each other. And while I am not totally litterate in the whole Giant Robot fighting game genre, I know a good fighting game from another. Tech Romancer is a good fighting game.

With twelve robots to choose from, including hidden mecha, Tech Romancer promises to have something for every one. Each mech is a un-embarrased rip off of some mech Anime, from Evangelion to Battletech. Each is also fully fleshed out, with the Macross esque robot having three forms and the Evangelion Angel boss having cross topped attacks. The weapons each brings to bear are also wonderfully stolen, like the Gundam flying drones. Its brutally fun to use the "mech" from your favorite anime to smash everything.

There is a lot to say about the fighting style and various modes but the Editor Review manages to cover most of it. I just really want to speak about the Story mode which my fellow reviewer found so poor. Yah...its campy. And yah, the cliches are so thick, you could cut them with a knife. But that is the point. The Macross style story line has the awesome pilot falling in love with the enemy, remenicent of Max and Miriya in the Series. And the Gundam style storyline is just as recognizable. The game producers were not trying to make some new world of anime, they were using everyone elses. Thats what makes it great. You get to play the stories. They ain't perfect, but its pretty fun in and of itself.
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