info

platform:

Genesis

Genre:

Pinball

Publisher:

Technosoft

Developer:

Naxat

Difficulty:

Hard

No. of Players:

1 or 2 players

Released:

1991

Media

In Game Picture

In Game Picture

In Game Picture

In Game Picture

In Game Picture

In Game Picture

In Game Picture

In Game Picture

Review

Dragon's Fury

By: Carl-Johan Brax | May 08, 2008

This review used the Japanese version of Dragon's Fury, Devil Crash. For reviewing purposes, both games will be covered by this single article.

I bought Sonic Spinball because it is a Sonic game, Crüe Ball because I like Mötley Crüe and Dino Land because it was in a cheap lot of four games with Puyo Puyo included. But when I decided to purchase Devil Crash MD, also known as Dragon's Fury outside of Japan, it was because I wanted a good pinball game. Was the purchase completely unnecessary considering I already had three pinball games? Read on!

Devil Crash MD is a port from a PC Engine game called Devil Crush, which was developed by Naxat. There are several other installments in their Crush pinball series, such as Alien Crush and Jaki Crush. While not world famous, they are at least known to be among the best pinball games. Perhaps that is why renowned Japanese developer Tecnosoft decided to port it to the Mega Drive. Tengen handled the western version of the game, which is called Dragon's Fury and it was heavily censored.

Since I hate censorship, I bought the Japanese version. I am just glad if my video games turn me into a Jewish Satanist, and by buying Devil Crash MD, all the hexagrams, pentagrams and destroyed coffins with crosses on them influenced me so badly I became a far worse person following a completely wrong religion. For a comparison with the TurboGrafx-16 version, read Joe Redifer's Side by Side article and to read about the whole franchise, check out Hardcore Gaming 101's article. With that said, I hope you have enough background information for this game, because now I begin with the actual review.

Devil Crash MD plays very much like an actual pinball game, with some additional features helped by the fact that it is a video game. You have three main tables and at the beginning six bonus stages. To reach the sixth bonus stage you turn a girl with a helmet into a dragon. I think the story involves saving this girl in some way, but don't hold me on that one since I don't really play pinball games for their stories. Your aim is to reach the bonus stages and defeat the baddies inside of them by hitting them with your ball. When you have beaten the six first bonus stages (it will take a looooong time unless you use an emulator or use cheat codes), two final bonus stages appear. Beat them or get a max score to see the epic ending.

You get to the bonus stages by accomplishing different tasks. Small green arrows point at holes to show you where to aim. Much of it seems very random, but part of the fun is figuring out how you get to them. There are many secret spots and features around the three main tables, which together with the quite hard difficulty gives you many hours of blasting pinball fun to be had before you discover it all. Beating the bonus levels is the most fun and gives you a nice kick. Getting extra balls is very necessary in order to beat all bonus stages. With a password function your score and balls are saved, but not the bonus stages you have beaten.

A flaw is the fact that the game plays a little too much by itself. It can be very hard to reach some spots without pure luck. Sometimes when you lose a ball (especially via the sides), it feels like there was nothing you could do to prevent that. The blazing speed of the ball can be devastating, even at the slowest option.

The graphics has a theme inspired by horror, goth and fantasy. The board is populated by wandering aliens, flame-spitting dragons, skulls and wizards. The art is very well drawn and the detailed backgrounds helps define a classy looking design you won't find elsewhere. While the colours are a little too bright and weak compared to the 8-bit version, the satanic content and backgrounds make up for it.

The sound is a mixed bag, but part of me still wants to put it in the excellent category. The music was written by Compile composers Toshiaki Sakoda (Musha Aleste) and Masanobu Tsukamoto (Puyo Puyo) and reprogrammed into YM2612 glory by Toshiharu Yamanishi (Thunder Force III, Thunder Force IV and Elemental Master). The compositions themselves are in a timeless land of synthrock with a classical vibe to it. Some are slow, some are fast, most are awsome. Who needs PCM samples when there is FM synthesis? We need them, because the drums and voices are of usual Tecnosoft quality. The PSG sound effects are also very scratchy sometimes, but they more or less work out in general.

Devil Crash MD is slightly flawed on all accounts, but is still a superb pinball game and the best one I have played on the console. Considering the genre isn't as popular as the one where you run around and shoot people, it might just be one of the best ever. If you are impatient or just bad at pinball, you might have a lot of trouble enjoying it, but then the problem lies at you, not the game. If you want a pinball game for your Mega Drive, this should be your primary choice.

Reviewer Score: 8.0   |   Avg. Reader Score: 8.7
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Current Comments:
User:Score:Date:Comment:
h00n 9 May 08, 2009 Its a great game. I seem to be alone in the world in prefering the sequal...
 
chinitosoccer 8 March 21, 2009 excelent pinball game, despite what some people may lead you to believe the PCE/TGFX-16 version is not better than the Megadrive version, more collorful yes, but not better, IMO the Megadrive version has better graphics, more resolution, better and a more fluid silky smother animation (FPS wise)and it sounds better.
 
appleroo 5 February 27, 2009 this game fails in comparison with the TG-16 counter part. The board itself is smaller, the music and sound is nowhere near the quality it should be and ball control seems a bit unresponsive at times. Get the TG version instead
 
weblit 9 August 05, 2008 Very fun, fast-paced, addicting game. The bonus stages are challenging and very cool, and when you defeat one it makes you want to pat yourself on the back. Another great classic game for the Genesis - and you can usually find it pretty cheap complete in the box!
 
M4R14N0 9 May 12, 2008 An outstanding pinball game. One of the best in the Genesis together with Codemasters' Psycho Pinball and Meldac/KaZe's Super Pinball 2 on the Japanese SNES. A must-buy.
 
hadjiquest 10 May 10, 2008 I LOVE PINBALL!!! This game gets a perfect 10 for challenges, replay value and coolness.
 
timewarpgamer 10 May 10, 2008 An incredible game. One of my all-time favorites. I think the TG-16 version is a little better, although the MD bonus stages rock.
 
Benjamin 9 May 10, 2008 As fantastic as the bonus stages are (level six really stands out as some of the best Genesis art ever on the system), there's a sameness about them that can be a bit boring. I also don't like how ugly the main board is compared to the original. Still, it's a solid video game pinball title and one of the system's best.
 
szycag 9 May 09, 2008 Scored this for five bucks complete recently. No it\'s not as good as the TG16, but it\'s one of the best console pinball games ever made, so that\'s OK.
 
megabomberman 9 May 09, 2008 One of the pinnacles of the megadrive that is so often overlooked, this game is simply godly!