Defunct Games reviews Darius Cozmic Collection Arcade, available now on PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch.
In the competitive world of arcade shoot ’em ups, Darius had no problem standing out. With an immersive widescreen display that required multiple monitors and a non-linear path that allowed for radically different playthroughs, this was a series designed to be noticed. But even if it didn’t have all of that going for it, I have a hunch that this long-running franchise would have found an audience. This is a shoot ’em up series where aliens have created giant mechanical spaceships that look like fish, sharks, squids and everything else you might find under the sea. Forget widescreen displays and choosing your own path, because this concept is golden.
The new compilation Darius Cozmic Collection Arcade brings all of these coin-op hits to the PlayStation 4 and Switch for the first time ever. This package includes multiple versions of the original 1986 arcade game, as well as ports of Darius II, Sagaia and Darius Gaiden, each with different modes and historical information to help put them in context. That’s the good news. Unfortunately, the steep asking price and relatively light selection of titles makes this difficult to recommend to anybody beyond the hardcore fans.
NOTE: Defunct Games received a digital code from the developer/publisher of this game for review purposes. For more information about the Defunct Games review policy visit www.defunctgames.com
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22 comments
So really, $40 now is equal to $22.99 in 1995. NOW, if you could get all these games for $20 in arcade perfect form in 1995, would you be complaining?
Gamers today are so spoiled.
QOTD Most dissappointing collection in my opinion will have to go to Taito Legends 2, while it had better offerings then it's prequel, it royally pissed me off they sucked the life force out of puzzle bobble 2/bust-a-move again and made the characters just a pair of disembodied hands with a steering wheel and a computer running some ai software, granted puchikarat did not suffer the same fate and did not have everything about it removed (besides the pre-fight dialogues from the JP version) but it STILL pisses me off just thinking about what they did to puzzle bobble 2
On one hand, I kinda hate to pick on it since Sega was well ahead of the curve in offering legal emulation of classic games; but what they gave you was noticeably inferior to just using, say Genecyst.
In that situation, you should be selling something that's at least as good as what people can get for free.
I've played the online arcade and been challenged while I was on the car bonus stage, instead of both of us destroying the car then fighting each other on the next stage it completely skipped the bonus stage and pushed us to fight. After I won (yay for me) I was shoved to the car bonus stage again, this happened another 3 times, so I racked up a dumb amount of points which meant nothing because if you beat the game, you can't save your score in that mode anyway!
QOTD, worst game compilation is probably Ninja Gaiden Trilogy on the SNES. Controls were way off, music was somehow worse, and some images in cinema scenes were flat out missing. Also that mega man collection on the gamecube can go to hell. B was jump and A was shoot and you couldn't change it.
People, don't pay for these collections at these prices. Don't allow another crappy trend of overpricing retro game collections to take off.
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