Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Metal Hawk

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Designer(s)
  
H. Nakatani

Arcade system
  
Namco System 2

Developer
  
Mode
  
Single-player video game

Cabinet
  
Upright and sitdown

Initial release date
  
September 1988

Publisher
  
Namco

Platform
  
Arcade game

Metal Hawk httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen55eMet

Composer(s)
  
Shinji HosoeKazuo Noguchi

Genre(s)
  
Multi-directional shooter Vertical Shooter

CPU
  
2x Motorola 68000 @ 12.288 MHz,1x Motorola M6809 @ 3.072 MHz,1x Hitachi HD63705 @ 2.048 MHz

Similar
  
Dirt Fox, Ordyne, Steel Gunner, Winning Run, Thunder Ceptor

Metal hawk full game playthrough not mame


Metal Hawk (メタルホーク, Metaru Hōku) is a multi-directional shooter arcade game that was released by Namco in 1988 only in Japan; it runs on Namco System 2 hardware, and was the third game from the company to allow scores which did not end in "0" (the first two were Hopping Mappy and Bakutotsu Kijūtei, which were released in 1986 and earlier in 1988 respectively). A conversion of the game for the Sega 32X was planned, but later cancelled.

Contents

Metal hawk review lucky hit arcade perfect


Gameplay

The player must take control of a helicopter (which is the eponymous "Metal Hawk"), and fight various enemies based on the land, in the air, and in the sea, in order to score a certain amount of points for each area within a set time limit; the game employs a perspective similar to that of Namco's own Assault (which also runs upon their System 2 hardware), in which Metal Hawk stays in the centre of the screen, while the playfield rotates around it. At the start of each area, Metal Hawk will fly up to its highest altitude of 400 metres - however, instead of rising up from the ground, the playfield seems to come down away from it, and when an area gets cleared, Metal Hawk will again fly up to its highest altitude and off the top of the screen. These methods of entering and leaving again reinforce the player-centric approach of the game, which also features voice samples (in Japanese).

References

Metal Hawk Wikipedia


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