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Curse (Mega Drive, 1989)

1989 comes to a close.

A Terry Gilliam joint.

PLAYERS: 1

PUBLISHER/DEVELOPER: Micronet

GENRE: Shoot-em-up

RELEASE DATE: 12/23/89 – (JP)

1989 was a landmark year for the Mega Drive. Just look at these games: Phantasy Star II, Ghouls ‘N Ghosts, Arnold Palmer Tournament Golf, Super Hang-On, Forgotten Worlds, Revenge of Shinobi, Mystic Defender, Golden Axe, Sword of Vermilion, Herzog Zwei. I don’t think the Master System ever had a year this good; not even ’87 or ’88, which were arguably the system’s golden years. Not all of the aforementioned games remain classics today, but their presence within the Mega Drive’s first year shows Sega’s ambition to be the G.O.A.T. or at least until they could top Nintendo.

Kolibri seems happy enough.

While there’s nothing particularly offensive about Curse, the shoot-em-up was clearly positioned as the dregs of Sega’s banner year. Both it and Golden Axe were released two days before Christmas in Japan. “Gee, Shinya-kun, which game do you want for Christmas? The Golden Axe port that looks just like the arcade or some random shoot-em-up?” Curse was also universally panned upon release, with an average of 47 out of 100 based on 8 reviews collected on SegaRetro. And despite an announced Western release by INTV Corporation, the game never materialized outside of Japan.

It’ll take more than a purple worm to get rid of… THE CURSE!!!

While Curse may have actually been cursed, in timing if nothing else, the shooting is more underwhelming than terrible. The game incorporates horizontal parallax scrolling, which drives the framerate down, but is actually a blessing in disguise. Despite the screen being filled by threats at all times, I was rarely overwhelmed by the vast amount of bullets and mecho-organic creatures thirsting for my ship’s sweet crude. The visuals won’t blast you with their processing, but there are some neat effects – like when you shoot a boss’s weak spot and their bodies put on a laser light show every time they’re hit.

“The two ships fell deeply in love and destroyed the solar system. The End.”

Your standard laser shot is worthless, but the game gives you a fair amount of power-ups to choose from. Two rotating satellites a la R-Type are able to absorb enemy fire and do some firing of their own. Homing missiles are also helpful, particularly for enemies that try to pull a spooky behind you. Bombs help disperse the clutter. Crash Shot sounds like a Mega Man weapon, but actually shoots slow-moving energy clusters. The Wide Shot is strong and wobbles every which way but directly in front of you, while the V-Beam fires aggressively in three separate directions. All weapons can be upgraded three times for maximum damage. Once you die, all power-ups leave you, save for the faithful homing missiles.

When in doubt, space.

With five relatively short levels, bosses with glaring weak points, and a shield that allows you to take about three hits of damage before you die, Curse is one of the easier shoot-em-ups I’ve ever played. Stages 4 and 5 are a little rough if your ship isn’t fitted to the nines with power-ups, but as long as you’ve got the goods, even novices shouldn’t have a problem getting through the game.

“We’ve had some good times, Crab Demon, but… I’ve found someone else.”

Read the game list from the first paragraph again. Curse can’t compete with them. The game isn’t bad in the traditional sense, just forgettable. Let’s compare to two other 1989 Mega Drive shmups. Truxton was visually unappealing to me, but the game’s aggressive action inflamed the masochist within. Thunder Force II‘s unorthodox overhead flying view both intrigued and annoyed me, but I kept playing until I got stuck in the Caverns. Both games have their flaws, but they also have defining characteristics, personalities, souls. Curse has five levels of average space shooting. While that may have been enough for the Master System, the Mega Drive is clearly capable of – and deserves – a little more effort.

C

9 replies on “Curse (Mega Drive, 1989)”

When I first saw the cover art for this game a few years back, I really had hoped it to be a hidden gem, but as you say, it’s universally reviewed as mediocre. A shame, but maybe I’ll have a go at it one day if it’s not difficult.

This was very very close to getting released here. I remade seeing all the preview coverage and then It never came out. I guess there was a good reason. I’ve heard that if you over clock your Genesis this is one of the the games that really benefits by removing slowdown. As I’ve heard the slowdown is pretty bad.

I didn’t find the slowdown to be that big of a problem. If anything, the slowdown makes the game too easy.

I wonder if INTV pulled it at the last second due to the bad reviews the game was getting. If so, that was probably a wise decision.

Completely agree with the review, the games not offensive but it doesn’t scream quality either. It reminds me of a home computer shooter rather than the fast, slick shooters the MD would become famed for.

I’ve known about Curse for a number of years, and while I’ve spent some time on it via emulation, it’s never been enough to beat it, primarily because, as you say, the game isn’t really good enough to warrant spending the time to do so, unless you’re reviewing it. It’s a paragon of mediocrity, and nothing about it stands out enough to make it one to purchase. The only thing it has going for it over the other two games is that, unlike TF2, it’s all horizontal scrolling levels, and unlike Truxton, it has some reasonably good visual effects, and slightly less screechy music & sound. Otherwise, it’s as middle-of-the-road as it gets for Megadrive shoot-em-ups. The music is totally unmemorable, the weapons are semi-interesting, but generally better implemented in other arcade shmups, and the graphics are usually somewhat bland. Even a middling shooter like Arrow Flash at least had some colorful graphics and sort of catchy music, as well as smooth gameplay. Curse is a step down from that, and as a result, didn’t make the grade. As much as I’d like to own a Megadrive copy of it, being the shmup fanatic that I am, I can’t imagine I’ll ever come across a copy that’s inexpensive enough that I’d want to bother.

“A Paragon of Mediocrity.”

You hit the nail on the head, Josh. I think I like Curse better than most people, and even I’ll admit, it just feels like a budget shoot-em-up.

The cover art rocks, though!

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