Submit | Contests | Top Rated | Reviews | Previews | Guides | Cheats | Screens | Scores | Videos | News | Forums | Blogs | Register | Login | Users | Staff | Links | Meta
HonestGamers: Intelligent gamers wanted... and rewarded!
Arcade :: Dreamcast :: DS :: GameCube :: iPhone/iPod :: Macintosh :: PC :: PlayStation 2 :: PlayStation 3 :: PSP :: Wii :: Xbox :: Xbox 360 :: Retro & Import
Earn prizes and eliminate ads just by contributing content on your FREE user account. Click for details or register today!


Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy Twitter giveaway Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy Twitter giveaway
Just by participating regularly on the site, you can become eligible to receive free stuff like games, systems, gift certificates and more! HonestGamers, where intelligent gamers are wanted... and rewarded!
The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass video game review Looking for a good read?
Check out a selection from our database of more than 6000 video game reviews! EmP has written a The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass review and figures that the game deserves a rating of 4 out of 10. What do you think? Check it out, then be sure to leave feedback or chime in with one of your own!

Systems > DS > K > Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits > Staff Review

Sign into your user account to view or leave feedback for this review. Don't have an account yet? You can click here to open one. It only takes a minute, and it's free!

Review by Jason Venter
March 28, 2007

Buying any collection of old video games is risky business. For every fantastic anthology from Capcom or Midway, there’s another from someone else that just doesn’t live up to what you remember from days at a friend’s house or at the local arcade. You always run the risk that you’ll get something that leaves a sour taste in your mouth, something like Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits.

To be fair, Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits does make a reasonable effort to be something special. There are 15 games here and you can tweak them all you like. Want to let the player continue when his game ends? There’s an option for that. Want to slow down or speed up the flow of traffic in Road Fighter? It can be done. There’re even trivia cards and historical notes. There’s just the one problem: most of the available titles aren’t much fun.

It’s clear that this is a historical retrospective. What else could explain the presence of uninspired clunkers like Basketball? It’s such a stiff mess that you’ll have a hard time moving the ball anywhere. Fun? Not even close. There are other stinkers, too, like Circus Charlie. In that game, you must work your way to the right, jumping through flaming hoops and over buckets of fire. Oftentimes, your jumps land you right in the middle of the latter and your game is over almost before it begins.

Horror Maze feels more substantial, but it’s boring. Your goal is to run around a maze, grab a key, then exit without enemy contact. You can fire laser beams along horizontal lines, which is handy until you have to head up a corridor and an enemy above you brushes against you for an instant kill. Uninspired visuals combine with a frustrating experience to ensure that you won’t want to waste much time on the title.

Then there’s Track & Field, a one-time gem in Konami’s early library of releases. Here, it just feels pointless. You tap the ‘A’ button to run to the finish ahead of your opponent, then go to the next event and tap the same button to build up speed before taking a long jump. Sports games have progressed well beyond anything you’ll find in this compilation, which renders Track & Field nearly unplayable.

Rainbowbell is a vertical shooter that might be fun if your ship didn’t move like the slowest vessel in Gradius. As you fly north, you can drop bombs on ground troops and shoot enemy fighters out of the sky. Sometimes you fly through a cloudbank and bells start floating in front of you. Shoot them for a bonus… then die because you couldn’t avoid an approaching projectile. The whole experience just feels rough.

On the other side of the coin, but planted firmly in the same tedious spectrum, there’s a fighting game called Yie Ar Kung-Fu. You fight one opponent at a time, kind of like in Street Fighter II. Your fighter can kick and punch, but his adversaries can throw stars and seem to have little trouble staying out of range. So you jump toward them to deal a vicious attack, only you float way too far and land at the opposite end of the arena. Apparently, game developers hadn’t figured out how to make controllable fighting games back in the 80s.

Roc’n Rope’s controls also disappoint. You start at the bottom of a series of cliffs and your goal is to reach the top by swinging out ropes and flashing your adversaries with stun guns. The problem is that it can be difficult to judge what ledge your rope will stick to when you hurl it, and once you start using it to navigate a wide gap, an enemy can come up behind you and tug the rope so that you fall. The game is too hard and too imprecise for its own good.

The good news is that the other half of the compilation is actually enjoyable. You’ve probably already played Contra and Gradius, two simple games that work fine here except for the fact that the small screen sometimes makes it difficult to see approaching shots in Contra as well. Rush’n Attack is more obscure and plays just fine here, except that it’s pretty difficult. Enemies like to gang up on you and it’s easy to fly through all of your lives even before completing the first stage. I would imagine that action veterans will like the game just fine, but by extension are unlikely to enjoy many of the other titles available on the compilation.

Time Pilot and Scramble are two more Konami favorites. They seem particularly well-suited for the handheld. Scramble is simple and straight-forward enough that you’ll probably be able to enjoy it without wishing you were playing on the big screen. Time Pilot could benefit from an analogue stick, but is also quite enjoyable. The problem with both Time Pilot and Scramble is that they’re already available on the Xbox 360 in superior form.

Ultimately, that leaves two titles to carry the anthology.

Shao-Lin’s Road is a rather uncomplicated game that finds you running around on platforms and kicking bosses. You can jump up or down to alternate levels. So can your foes. You have to watch out for bosses that take quite a bit more punishment and also move quickly enough that they might get in a few hits before you notice their presence. Level backgrounds and hazards change often enough to keep things fresh.

Road Fighter rounds out the collection and ends things on a high note. Think of a gun-free Spy Hunter. You must race through a gauntlet of winding roads before your fuel runs out, gathering refills on the way and avoiding collisions. Pleasantly, ramming into a vehicle does not spell instant doom. Sometimes you’ll recover with only a slight hiccup, and sometimes you’ll go spinning but can pull free of the destructive collision that awaits you if you slam into the back of a semi-truck or into a guard rail. Addictive and accessible, Road Fighter is perhaps the best of the lot.

Personal preferences are bound to vary, but it seems like a safe bet that the selection here won’t ultimately do much to please any but the arcade purists that likely already have a few game cabinets set up in their garage. Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits could have been something truly special with another 15 or so quality offerings, but in its current form it’s just another of those compilations most will choose to avoid.


Rating
6
A lot of the games included just don't hold up well at all. Someone worked hard to add nice features, but they're not working with enough hits to make this compilation special.
Read more about the review rating scale...

Staff reviews represent the opinion of the individual staff member that wrote them and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the site staff as a whole. If you disagree with the contents of this review, you may click to leave feedback on our dedicated forum. Thank you!




HG 2009 Fundraising Progress: $348 / $2500 (14%)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Click to learn about the Fundometer or to advertise.

Game Profile & Content All NA EU JP AU
Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits (DS) game cover art
Staff Score (Avg): 6.0
User Score (Avg): N/A
Press Score (Avg): N/A
Reviews: 1
Guides: 0
Cheats: 0
Ratings: 1
High Scores: 0
Screenshots: 6
Videos: 0

Title: Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits
Genre: Compilation
Publisher: Konami
Developer: Konami
Release Date: March 27, 2007
ESRB: E10+


Do you own this game? Register for a free account to track it and other games in your collection!

 Voice Your Opinion...
 Average User Rating (1 rating)
Only registered users can rate this game!
DS discussion forums

 While you're here...

Retro Game Challenge Retro Game Challenge is another DS game in the Compilation genre that has been attracting activity lately, so you might want to check it out and see what all of the fuss is about!

Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits screenshot
Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits screenshot
Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits screenshot

   

Site Info | User Help | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise | Site King
© 1998-2009 HonestGamers
None of the material contained within this site--from reviews, guides, cheats, fiction, and editorials to message board posts--may be reproduced in any conceivable fashion without permission from the author(s) of said material. This site is not sponsored or endorsed by Nintendo, Sega, Sony, Microsoft, or any other such party. Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits is a registered trademark of its copyright holder. This site makes no claim to Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits, its characters, screenshots, artwork, music, or any intellectual property contained within. No opinions expressed in any review, guide, cheat, fanfic, or editorial necessarily represent the opinion of the staff or any site sponsors.
eXTReMe Tracker