Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Gun Buster (arcade game)

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Arcade system
  
Taito SZ System

Developer
  
Taito

Genre
  
First-person shooter

Platform
  
Arcade game

Initial release date
  
1992

Publisher
  
Taito

Cabinet
  
Video game arcade cabinet

Gun Buster (arcade game) Gun Buster Videogame by Taito

Designer(s)
  
T. MatsumotoRyuji Tominaga

Programmer(s)
  
Shinji SoyanoHikaru TaniguchiTakashi Ishii

Artist(s)
  
Ryuji TominagaTsutomu SekimotoHisakazu Katoh

Composer(s)
  
Kazuyuki OhnuiYasuko Yamada

Mode(s)
  
Single player, multiplayer (2-4 players)

Similar
  
Under Fire, Operation Wolf 3, Space Gun, Steel Gunner 2, Steel Gunner

Gun Buster (ガン バスター), also known as Gunbuster (ガンバスター) and released in North America as Operation Gunbuster, is a first-person shooter video game developed by Taito and released for arcades in 1992. In contrast to on-rail light gun shooters at the time, this was one of the first arcade games to feature free-roaming FPS gameplay, the same year Wolfenstein 3D was released on personal computers.

Contents

Gun Buster (arcade game) Gun Buster An FPS ahead of its time YouTube

Gun Buster's control scheme consists of a joystick for movement and strafing and a light gun for aiming and turning. The player can also carry multiple weapons, each with different recharge rates and movement speeds, and the game's maps include walls, glasses and columns that can be used for dodging and shootouts. It also features multiplayer deathmatch modes for up to four players, between two teams, on a dual-monitor arcade cabinet.

Gun Buster (arcade game) The Arcade Flyer Archive Video Game Flyers Gun Buster Taito

Gameplay

Gun Buster (arcade game) Gun Buster Taito Arcade Shooting Playthrough 33 YouTube

The game's control scheme consists of both a joystick and a light gun: the joystick moves the player character forwards, backwards and sidewards in a strafing maneuver, while the light gun moves the aiming reticule and turns the character around in clockwise and anti-clockwise directions, similar to later Wii Remote first-person shooters for the Wii home console. The player's arsenal consists of a primary machine gun and several secondary weapons: mines, laser, spark, and fire; each weapon has a different recharge rate and speed of movement. There is also an invincibility shield available that lasts for 15 seconds.

Gun Buster (arcade game) Gun Buster Game Giant Bomb

The mission mode can be played either as a single-player game, or a two-player cooperative game, with the second player able to join in at any time. The mission mode mostly consists of duels with bosses, across thirteen maps. In each map, the players runs through mazes trying to kill boss opponents before they kill the player. The maps include walls, glasses and columns that the player can use for dodging and shootouts.

Gun Buster (arcade game) Gun Buster Videogame by Taito

As the first title to run on the Taito SZ System arcade system board, the game's graphics improved on Taito's previous light gun shooter Space Gun. The graphics were also more detailed and dynamic than other first-person shooters at the time, such as Wolfenstein 3D and Blake Stone; in Gun Buster's first level, for example, players can shoot out the windows in a glass elevator.

Gun Buster (arcade game) Gun Buster Game Giant Bomb

The game's competitive multiplayer mode features a head-to-head deathmatch between two teams, predating Doom's competitive multiplayer mode. It can be played either between two players, between four players with two players on each team, or between three players with two players on one team and a single player on the other team. The arcade cabinet features a dual-monitor setup, with the second screen used primarily in the deathmatch mode, for the second, third and/or fourth players.

Plot

Gun Buster (arcade game) Gun Buster Videogame by Taito

The game takes place in Agalia City, a fictional science fiction city where cyborg crime has become rampant. In the year 2169, the city offered rewards for cyborg criminals and introduced an organization of hunters. As time passed, humanity began to refer to these hunters as "Gunbusters".

Reception

In 2005, Gamasutra surveyed game developers on their favorite arcade games of all time, with one developer, Ebon Kim, citing Gun Buster as his "favorite of all time" and writing a brief review, stating he "would play for three hours straight without putting in another quarter" and it was "fun playing against other people." He believed "Gunbuster was a revolutionary First-Person Shooter game" and "before its time" and that if "an upgraded version was out today, many FPS enthusiasts would flock to it and tournaments would be held" or "at least that's what I wish would happen."

References

Gun Buster (arcade game) Wikipedia