Burning Rangers

Burning Rangers[1] is a 1998 action game developed by Sonic Team and published by Sega for the Sega Saturn. Burning Rangers is set in a futuristic society in which fire is the remaining danger. Players control one of an elite group of firefighters, the Burning Rangers, who extinguish fires and rescue civilians in burning buildings. Most of the tasks the players complete are centred around collecting energy crystals to transport civilians to safety. In lieu of an in-game map, Burning Rangers features a voice navigation system which directs players through corridors.

Burning Rangers
European cover art
Developer(s)Sonic Team
Publisher(s)Sega
Director(s)Naoto Ohshima
Producer(s)Yuji Naka
Artist(s)Naoto Ohshima
Hideaki Moriya
Kosei Kitamura
Composer(s)Naofumi Hataya
Fumie Kumatani
Masaru Setsumaru
Platform(s)Sega Saturn
Release
  • JP: 26 February 1998
  • NA: 31 May 1998
  • EU: 16 June 1998
Genre(s)Action, third-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Development began shortly after the release of Christmas Nights in November 1996. Producer Yuji Naka wanted to create a game which involved saving people rather than killing them. Sonic Team chose to connect the game with firefighting as they thought it was an effective way of having players identify with heroism. It was released in Japan in February 1998, and later that year in North America in May and in Europe in June. Burning Rangers received mostly positive reviews. Critics unanimously commended the game's soundtrack and audio, with the voice navigation system receiving particular praise. The response to the graphics was mixed, with some critics asserting that it had the best visuals on the Saturn, although it was noted for its poor collision detection and occasional glitching. The game was among the final five Saturn games released in America.

Gameplay

In this screenshot, the player-character is extinguishing a fire. From left to right, the interface displays the time, number of crystals collected, health meter, danger meter, and water nozzle.

Burning Rangers is a third-person shooter game in which players complete missions involving extinguishing fires and rescuing civilians.[2][3] The game is set in a futuristic society in which fire is the only danger, and stars an elite group of firefighters, the Burning Rangers.[4][5] The player assumes control of one of two apprentice rangers, and completes tasks across the game's four levels.[6] The primary objective is to transport stranded civilians from burning buildings, by collecting energy crystals dropped from extinguished fires.[7] A minimum of five crystals are needed to transport a civilian to safety; the player receives an energy shield if they use ten.[8] The crystals function similarly to rings in Sonic the Hedgehog games: possessing at least one crystal allows a player to survive damage from an enemy or fire. Being hit once scatters the player's crystals and renders them vulnerable to death.[7][9][10][11]

The game's four stages take place in a power plant, underwater habitat, space station and spaceship in zero gravity, respectively.[2][9][12] Every level is an interior space, and consists of multi-storey rooms and corridors divided by interlocking lifts and doors.[5] The player is equipped with a jet pack to reach higher areas and perform acrobatic manoeuvres such as backflips and rolls.[13][14] They can also swim and dive underwater.[2][9] Robots[15] attack the player with shooting flames should they come into contact. Each stage ends with a boss battle, ranging from fire-breathing flowers to robotic fish.[9][15][16]

Since there is no in-game map, the player character relies on a voice navigation system to find their way. The mission controller gives the player directions depending on their location, which can be repeated at any time.[7][3] At the end of each stage, the player receives a rank based on their score and success at putting out fires, with "S" the highest and "D" the lowest.[17] Once the game is completed, a random generator mode is unlocked which mixes up the order of corridors in the game's four stages,[18] with a potential total of 3,125 unique routes.[2][19]

Story

Burning Rangers takes place on a futuristic Earth where the only threat to human life is from fires. To this end a team of highly specialised fire-fighters called Burning Rangers are dispatched to emergency incidents to fight fires and rescue people in danger. The player is given the choice of two playable characters to play as; Shou Amabane or Tillis. The selected character is first taken through a tutorial stage where they are introduced to the other members of the team, Chris Parton, Reed Phoenix, Big Landman and the non-selected playable character, before being taken on missions. During the final mission, the Rangers are introduced to Ilia Klein, a girl placed in suspended animation and sent into space after contracting an incurable disease. Ilia informs the Rangers her ship is set to crash into Earth causing complete devastation, so the Rangers devise a plan to stop the ship and rescue Ilia. In the end credit scenes, it is revealed that Shou and Tillis become fully fledged Rangers, and Ilia is cured of her disease and settles into her new life on Earth as a member of the Burning Rangers.

Development

Conceptualisation and planning

We wanted to create a game where you could rescue people. Nowadays, there are so many games where you just kill people. Instead we decided to make a rescue game.

Yuji Naka in an interview with Sega Saturn Magazine[20]

Development of Burning Rangers started around November 1996, after the release of Sonic Team's previous game Christmas Nights (a Christmas-themed demo for Nights into Dreams).[21] The concept originated with the idea of rescuing people as opposed to killing them, which was an element that producer Yuji Naka felt was too common in contemporary video games.[20] The development team of 31 (out of Sonic Team's staff of about 50) was directed by Naoto Ohshima, the director and lead designer Takao Miyoshi. The rest of the team consisted of three game planners, six programmers, eighteen designers, and two sound producers, most of whom had worked on Nights into Dreams.[22][21][23] In addition to the Sonic Team staff, Sega allotted a full consumer software team to the project.[24]

The team chose to centre the game on firefighters as they felt that fire was the most appropriate way to create fear and tension. In a retrospective interview, Ohshima said that many of the things done by firefighters—along with rescuing people—were "the very essence of a Sonic Team game", and that they recognised that a firefighter was a hero with whom people could identify.[25] The team wanted to make a game with a rescue theme as Naka thought there were few games based on that concept.[21] According to Takeo Miyoshi, "Our first inspiration came from the explosion and building destruction scenes of Hollywood movies. We just wanted to describe the heroism of lifesaving in that loud, explosive type of setting."[22] The developers wanted to design a future that was "clean and beautiful", with sustainable energy, but where disasters still could occur, and only heroes could protect people from them. The designers envisioned that a futuristic firefighter would be acrobatic and dexterous to reach places where people were trapped.[26]

Although the target audience of Burning Rangers was people who enjoyed action games, the developers also wanted to attract fans of other Sonic Team games.[26] Ohshima stressed that he was aiming at a wider audience and not the type of person who only played Sonic the Hedgehog, adding that "players should recognise the Sonic Team touch immediately" with Burning Rangers.[27] The working title was Firefighter, but it was dropped as the team wanted a "cooler" sounding name. Naka felt that "burning" had a "go for it!" connotation in Japanese, and fit with the disaster-rescue theme. He was initially unsure about having "ranger" in the title as he felt that a ranger referred to park rangers in western culture. The team thought that the image of a "ranger" also brought to mind the Power Rangers franchise, and after consulting speakers of other languages, Burning Rangers was chosen as the game's name.[26]

Design

During the early stages of development, some members of Sonic Team visited Hong Kong shortly before the transfer of British sovereignty, in hopes of finding inspiration for the game's stages.[28] Some staff also travelled to Universal Studios in California to experience the Backdraft attraction to learn how to generate a similar sensation in the game.[26] The team also visited a special firefighting event in Tokyo where they witnessed robots putting out fires, and were surprised to see how it compared to their image of the game's futuristic setting. Naka recalled that the robot had special infrared sensors and a camera which could see through fires, and was impressed by their techniques.[28] According to Naka, the team did not ask for advice from professional firefighters during development, partly due to the concern that their game would not be well received, as Naka thought they would have said that real firefighting "wasn't that simple". At the Tokyo Games Show, a real firefighter, however, did comment that the character's costumes were too thin. Naka reflected that if they had made any of game elements highly realistic, the contrast between those elements and the clearly fictional elements would have been exaggerated.[28]

Yuji Naka, the game's producer, pictured in 2015

The game uses the same engine as Nights into Dreams.[2][28][29][30] When Sonic Team developed Nights into Dreams, they were new to programming for the Sega Saturn, and when the engine was re-used for Burning Rangers they were able to make it faster and more capable.[28] To design the stages and environments, Miyoshi outlined the corridors first, then placed fires in them before adding light effects to simulate the appearance of fire. Miyoshi thought that the team had over-reached in designing the game's detailed stages, saying: "everyone in the team wanted to put so much into the game that we only completed about half of what we wanted to do."[31] Naka said that although they designed only four stages, they ensured that the player's experience would increase progressively throughout the game because each stage was very large.[27] The developers initially used motion capture technology to capture data for poses and animation, but Naka soon discovered that it was impossible to get the results the team wanted, as it was unfeasible for people to perform the special motions they needed.[28] The developers resorted to creating the animation by hand, and only used the motion capture data for the player characters' walking animations.[28]

There were many difficulties in developing the game's voice navigation system, as no verbal dialogue had featured in a Sonic Team game before.[27] Naka asserted the team had rethought all ideas of what should be included in the game during development, and the idea of not including any on-screen maps but rather relying on a voice navigation system was "there from the start".[32] The team tested different forms of navigation systems and picked the best. Although previous Saturn games which used voice navigation systems (e.g. Solar Eclipse) did so in conjunction with background music, they felt that background music would detract from the sensation of being present in the game.[31][33] Miyoshi thought that the only audio accompaniment being the sound effects of fire and walls creaking would produce immersion.

The team originally wanted to record the game in six languages, but found the volume of work too difficult, reverting to English and Japanese instead.[31] Before selecting voice actors, Miyoshi designed the characters and built up a mental image of what they would sound like. Sonic Team hired several voice actors who had appeared in American television programmes.[31][27] According to Miyoshi, all audio work was re-written several times throughout development; he considered it to have "evolved" alongside the team's production of the game itself.[34]

We made a specific point of developing the game's sound—particularly the voice acting—and the audio navigation system in such a way that we could fully convey the sense of being in a 3D space, and of being caught up in a dramatic scenario.

Takao Miyoshi in an interview with GamesTM[33]

Designing the game's fire effects proved to be difficult due to the Saturn's rendering limitations. Miyoshi explained that during testing stages, the team spent a lot of time checking how well they would be able to create fires, which was a pivotal aspect of the game.[35] In the first test ROM they produced, Miyoshi discovered that they were able to achieve "some quite beautiful" fire effects by disguising blocky sprites with various degrees of transparency and lighting effects. At the time, few games used polygons in 3D spaces for acrobatic and exploration-orientated gameplay.[33]

Burning Rangers' animated cutscenes were produced by TMS Entertainment and it's subsidariy, Seoul Movie, who had also produced the Virtua Fighter anime and the Man of the Year short on Sonic Jam for Sega, as well as cinematic feature films such as Akira and Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland. The company has produced content for Sega since it was subsidised as TMS-Kyokuchi. The game's anime cutscenes were made with digital animation instead of cel shading, as it was easier to develop for CDs.[31][3] According to Miyoshi, the entire development of the game spanned around a year and a half, although the programming took less than a year.[22]

Sega of Japan planned for Burning Rangers to be the headliner of their 1997 Christmas season releases,[24] but the game was not ready for release in Japan until early 1998.

The game was among the final five Saturn games released in America.[36] Each of the main developers reflected on what they were proudest of: Naka expressed relief that Sonic Team were able to "get a good overall balance" for the game, whereas Miyoshi thought that the voice navigation system was the strongest aspect. Main programmer Takuya Matsumoto was delighted to see it released before the Saturn's discontinuation, saying "the fact that we've been able to push the Saturn this far is enough for me to die happy".[37] Burning Rangers was released exactly nine months before the Japanese release of Sega's next console, the Dreamcast.[22] IGN's Levi Buchanan characterized the release as an example of the Saturn's "ignominious send-off", writing that "sunset Saturn games like Panzer Dragoon Saga and Burning Rangers demanded far better launches. The way these games were slipped into retail with zero fanfare and low circulation was insulting to both hard-working developers and Sega fans."[2]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame[7]
CVG[38]
GamePro8/10[6]
GameSpot6.2/10[9]
IGN8/10[2]
Next Generation[39]
Sega Saturn Magazine (UK)90%[19]
Sega Saturn Magazine (Japan)80%[40]
Hobby Consolas92%[41]
GMR8/10[36]

Reviewers praised Burning Rangers' colourful lighting effects, but criticised its collision detection and occasional graphical glitching.[42][41][6][38][7] Lee Nutter of the British Sega Saturn Magazine enjoyed the detailed characters and described the lighting effects as excellent, although he, along with IGN's Levi Buchanan, noticed that the visuals had minor problems.[42][2] Sonia Herranz from Hobby Consolas and Ed Lomas from Computer and Video Games commended the character's designs, colourful lighting and detailed visuals, though Lomas declared that the graphics "[did] often look a mess".[41][38]

The game's poor collision detection was unanimously criticised by reviewers, and Colin Williamson of AllGame also felt that the game's prominent polygon errors were a problem, though he appreciated the attractive lighting effects.[7] Some critics compared the game's visuals to those of Nights into Dreams.[9][36] Ryan MacDonald commented that it had a similar look and feel to that game's 3D environment, and that Burning Rangers' polygonal graphics were "some of the best [he had] ever seen".[9] Mike Weigand from GamePro considered that the majority of the game featured "drab" stage designs,[6] and in a retrospective review GMR's Dave Smith thought that the game "looks like hell" and had not aged as well as Nights into Dreams, and that its engine could not handle a free-roaming environment without harming its visuals.[36] Weigand felt the game's 3D environment was a mix of both Tomb Raider and Nights into Dreams.[6]

The soundtrack and sound effects received praise, though reviewers recognised that the game lacked music to create tension.[19][2][7] Buchanan appreciated that the game contained a few tracks of "excellent" Sega-style music, with his favourite being the theme song.[2] Although Williamson, Weigand, and Nutter noted the lack of in-game music, they lauded the vocal tracks, voice samples, and sound clues.[7][19][6] Most reviewers questioned the quality of the dialogue.[19][36][41][7] Weigand felt it was "lame",[6] and Smith said the game contained "some of the worst voice acting ever produced by human lungs".[36] Herranz had difficulty understanding crucial dialogue since the audio was only recorded in English, although she admitted that the voice guidance system was an innovative element.[41] Williamson praised Sega's decision to produce full voiced dialogue as opposed to subtitling original Japanese dialogue, and also praised its "good-to-excellent" English voice acting, though it was "no Shakespeare".[7]

Reviewers had mixed opinions on the control scheme and use of the Saturn 3D controller.[13][6][14][7] Nutter noted that the controls were a mix of those featured in Tomb Raider and Nights into Dreams, praising the use of the analogue stick to perform complex manoeuvres.[13] A reviewer from the Japanese Sega Saturn Magazine felt the game was more comfortable with an analogue pad as opposed to the default Saturn controller,[14] and Williamson similarly thought the control scheme was "great" when used with an analogue pad.[7] In contrast, Weigand criticised the lack of a custom configuration and described the controls as "squirrelly", even with the analogue controller.[6] A couple of reviewers criticised the game's short length and lack of difficulty.[19][2] Nutter suggested that accomplished players would have it "clocked" in a couple of days and felt it did not take much effort to complete the four levels,[19] whilst Buchanan said it was "too short for its own good", a problem made worse by its enjoyable gameplay.[2]

Notes

  1. Japanese: バーニングレンジャー Hepburn: Bāningu Renjā
  2. Buchanan, Levi (3 September 2008). "Burning Rangers Retro Review". IGN. Retrieved 18 October 2016.
  3. Nutter 1998, p. 57.
  4. Sonic Team 1998, p. 2.
  5. Jevons 1997, p. 110.
  6. Weigand 1998, p. 108.
  7. Williamson, Colin. "Burning Rangers review". AllGame. Archived from the original on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  8. Sonic Team 1998, p. 21.
  9. Mac Donald, Ryan (25 March 1998). "Burning Rangers review". GameSpot. Retrieved 18 October 2016.
  10. Sega Saturn Magazine staff 1998, pp. 60–61.
  11. Sonic Team 1998, p. 22.
  12. Sonic Team 1998, pp. 17–18.
  13. Nutter 1998, p. 58.
  14. Sega Saturn Magazine staff 1998, p. 59.
  15. Jevons 1997, p. 111.
  16. Lomas 1998, p. 64.
  17. Sonic Team 1998, p. 24.
  18. GamesTM staff 2008, p. 137.
  19. Nutter 1998, p. 59.
  20. Nutter 1998, p. 51.
  21. Brookes 1998, p. 68.
  22. GamesTM staff 2008, p. 134.
  23. A team of 31 was about the usual size for a Sega project.[21]
  24. "Introducing... Sonic Team's Awsome[sic] Burning Ranger!". Sega Saturn Magazine. No. 24. Emap International Limited. October 1997. pp. 6–7. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
  25. Nutter 1998, pp. 50–51.
  26. Nutter 1998, p. 52.
  27. Brookes 1998, p. 69.
  28. Nutter 1998, p. 53.
  29. Herranz 1998, p. 104.
  30. Next Generation staff 1997, p. 114.
  31. Nutter 1998, p. 54.
  32. Nutter 1998, pp. 54–55.
  33. GamesTM staff 2008, p. 135.
  34. GamesTM staff 2008, p. 136.
  35. GamesTM staff 2008, pp. 134–135.
  36. Smith 2003, p. 103.
  37. Nutter 1998, p. 55.
  38. Lomas 1998, p. 65.
  39. "Finals". Next Generation. No. 44. Imagine Media. August 1998. p. 92.
  40. Sega Saturn Magazine staff 1998, p. 58.
  41. Herranz 1998, p. 106.
  42. Nutter 1998, pp. 58–59.
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References

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