Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Marvel Super Heroes
in War of the Gems
North American cover art by Glenn Fabry.
Developer(s)Capcom
Publisher(s)Capcom
Laguna Video Games (Europe)
Composer(s)Takane Ōkubo
Katsunari Kitajima
Platform(s)Super NES
Release
  • JP: October 18, 1996
  • NA: November 21, 1996[1]
  • EU: February 1997
Genre(s)Platform, beat-'em-up
Mode(s)Single-player

Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems (マーヴルスーパーヒーローズ ウォーオブザジェム, Māvuru Supā Hīrōzu: Wō obu za Jemu) is a 1996 beat-'em-up platform game developed by Capcom for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, based on the events of Marvel Comics' series The Infinity Gauntlet and The Infinity War. In the game's plot, Adam Warlock calls upon Earth's greatest superheroes to seek out the Infinity Gems before they fall into the wrong hands.

Although War of the Gems is based on a similar storyline as the Capcom arcade game Marvel Super Heroes, and each of the playable characters retains one of the special moves they had in that game, it is not a port; War of the Gems instead features gameplay similar to Final Fight[2] and X-Men: Mutant Apocalypse.[3] In 2020, the game was rereleased as part of a home arcade cabinet from Arcade1Up alongside X-Men vs. Street Fighter, Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter and Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes.[4]

Gameplay

[edit]
Spider-Man fights a Puck doppelganger.

The player plays each level as one of five superheroes - Captain America, Iron Man, Spider-Man, Wolverine, or Hulk - as they battle through various locations around the globe and even outer space. Each character's health bar is separate and carries over between missions - healing can only be done by picking up items in the levels or using healing items picked up during missions. When a character is defeated, they must be revived individually with the appropriate item. After investigating an area, the player may or may not be rewarded with one of the gems resulting in a restart of the entire game. Only two can be picked up during the first four missions, one is picked up in the following mission upon defeating The Magus, and then two more are randomly received in two of the four following levels. Each character can also select any of the obtained Infinity Gems before stages to obtain gameplay advantages: the Power Gem enables greater attack power; the Time Gem allows for faster movement; the Soul Gem doubles a character's health gauge; the Reality Gem makes extra items visible throughout the stage; and the Space Gem allows for higher jumps.[5] The last gem, Mind, is only received upon defeating Thanos, thus completing the game.[citation needed]

Playable characters include:

  • Captain America: Balanced in both attack and speed, he's the second character to deliver powerful hits, as well as the second bulkiest character (all-around type).
  • Iron Man: Powerful and fast, can use a variety of projectiles, and also has a double jump and high-speed air attack (all-around type).
  • Hulk: The biggest character in the game, being the strongest, the slowest, the bulkiest, and with the lowest jump height (power type).
  • Spider-Man: The fastest character in the game, but also the weakest. His attack lasts the longest. His low stance allows him to dodge some attacks without having to crouch. Can climb walls by pressing jump near them (speed type).
  • Wolverine: A balanced fighter between Spider-Man and Captain America. Much like Spider-Man, he can climb walls and is relatively small (balanced type).

Throughout the levels, there are Doppelganger enemies of Wolverine, Hulk, and Iron Man to fight against, as well as of Daredevil, Hawkeye, Puck, She-Hulk, Silver Surfer, Thing, and Vision. Blackheart, Nebula, Sasquatch, a Doombot, and Doctor Doom appear as bosses along with two Iron Man Doppelgangers and Thanos.

Reception

[edit]

Allgame gave the game a score of 3.5 out of 5.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "SUPER PUZZLE BREAKS INTO 32 BIT". 1997-05-15. Archived from the original on 1997-05-15. Retrieved 2023-10-05.
  2. ^ "Marvel Super Heroes War of the Gems: The Battle for Precious Stones Begins Now!". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 86. Ziff Davis. September 1996. pp. 106, 108.
  3. ^ "Super NES Preview: Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems". GamePro. No. 97. IDG. October 1996. p. 92.
  4. ^ "IGN Summer of Gaming: Arcade1Up Announces X-Men, Ms. Pac-Man and More New Cabinets - IGN". 10 June 2020.
  5. ^ Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems Instruction Manual. Capcom. 1996. p. 14.
  6. ^ "Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems". AllGame. Archived from the original on 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2015-12-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
[edit]