List of Sailor Moon Video Games - Sailor Moon (Angel) 1993

Sailor Moon (Angel) 1993

Sailor Moon
Developer(s) Angel (Super Famicom)
Ma-Ba (Sega Mega Drive)
Publisher(s) Angel (Super Famicom in Japan)
Bandai (SNES in France)
Ma-Ba (Sega Mega Drive in Japan only)
Series Sailor Moon Games
Platform(s) Arcade, SNES, Super Famicom, Sega Mega Drive
Release date(s) SNES/Super Famicom Version
  • August 27, 1993
  • 1994

Sega Mega Drive Version
  • 1994
Genre(s) beat 'em up
Mode(s) 1 Player or 2 Players
Media/distribution SNES/Super Famicom Cart, Mega Drive Cart.

Sailor Moon (美少女戦士セーラームーン, Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon) is a beat 'em up video game developed by Angel in 1993, and ported to the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It was translated into French in 1994. The Sega Mega Drive version was developed and published by Ma-Ba, although certain elements were recycled from the Super Famicom version.

The game is set in the first series of Sailor Moon, and the player takes control of one or two of the five heroines (Guardian Senshi). Each Senshi has some sequences of blows, three aerial attacks (neutral, moving forward/backward, downward) and a special charge-up projectile.

The game is divided into five stages:

  • Latin Quarter (boss: Bakene)
  • Amusement Park (boss: Muurido)
  • Secret Machine (boss: Zoisite disguised as Sailor Moon)
  • North Pole (boss: Kunzite)
  • Dark Kingdom (boss: Prince Endymion and Queen Beryl)

NOTE: If the game is played on Easy Mode, only the first two stages are playable, and the ending only shows a stationary image of the Inner Senshi with Usagi as Princess Serenity from the ending scene although the music does not play at that point.

The five heroines are:

  • Sailor Moon alias Usagi Tsukino; her special attack is Moon Tiara Action
  • Sailor Mercury alias Ami Mizuno; her special attack is Shabon Spray. She is faster than the other Senshi but has a shorter attack. She has a move where she can slam enemies into the ground, making the level shake.
  • Sailor Mars alias Rei Hino; her default attack is the kick, which is stronger than her punch. Her special attack is Fire Soul.
  • Sailor Jupiter alias Makoto Kino; her special attack is Supreme Thunder. She is stronger than any other Senshi and is the only one who jabs enemies with a fist, she does not flip anytime she jumps, and is the second Senshi that can slam enemies on the ground making the level rumble rapidly.
  • Sailor Venus alias Minako Aino; the only Sailor Senshi who uses a weapon (a chain) in battle - her special attack is Crescent Beam. She is the most difficult Senshi to control, but her chain has a better reach than the other Senshi that are unarmed.

The enemies are mostly the youma of the Dark Kingdom that appeared in the anime, but if more than one of the same kind appears at once, the others are coloured differently (a common device for this genre of games):

  • Akan
  • Crane Arashino Joe
  • Garoben
  • Jumeau
  • Jiji
  • Chiffon Puppet (unique to the game)
  • Clown (unique to the game)
  • Female magician (unique to the game)

This game was translated into French in Europe, but was never imported to the United States. In the French translation, there were many errors:

  • If the player loses the game, "SIN" is displayed onscreen, rather than "FIN" ("GAME OVER").
  • After each level, Tuxedo Mask appears to grade each Senshi's performance. If the player gets a "C", he says "MOYENE" (a non-existent word) rather than "MOYENNE" ("Average").
  • Sailor Venus was renamed "Sailor Mathilde" on the screen where Tuxedo Mask grades each Senshi's performance.
  • The final scene's dialogue has many incomplete sentences.

The Mega Drive version features most of the stages from the SNES version but a few were removed and replaced. Some of the boss battles are different as well, and a new hidden final boss, Queen Metallia is featured when playing on Hard Mode. The Mega Drive counterpart does not contain any of the music from the SNES game, with the exception of the main theme song at the title screen, bosses also has their own song rather than a generic theme for all of them. The game has different endings for each playable character

Read more about this topic:  List Of Sailor Moon Video Games

Famous quotes containing the words sailor and/or moon:

    The sailor is frankness, the landsman is finesse. Life is not a game with the sailor, demanding the long head—no intricate game of chess where few moves are made in straight-forwardness and ends are attained by indirection, an oblique, tedious, barren game hardly worth that poor candle burnt out in playing it.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)

    Like the moon her kindness is.
    If kindness I may call
    What has no comprehension in’t,
    But is the same for all
    As though my sorrow were a scene
    Upon a painted wall.
    William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)