Compati Hero

Compati Hero[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2] is a video game series published in Japan by Banpresto and Namco Bandai Games (formerly Bandai) that began in 1990 that serves as 16 crossover teams between Ultraman, Kamen Rider (also known as Masked Rider) and Gundam. Characters from other franchises have also been featured in some of the initial games, as well as in the Compati Sports series, such as Mazinger Z, Getter Robo, Devilman and Godzilla.

Compati Hero
Genre(s)Sports, platform, role-playing, strategy, racing
Developer(s)Various
Publisher(s)
Platform(s)Family Computer, Super Famicom, Game Boy, Game Boy Color, Sega Pico, PlayStation, GameCube, Dreamcast
First releaseSD Battle Ōzumō: Heisei Hero Basho
April 20, 1990
Latest releaseLost Heroes 2
February 2, 2015

It was the first video game series to involve a crossover between animated giant robots and live action tokusatsu heroes from different established franchises.[1][2] The series makes this possible by using caricaturized versions of the characters (officially referred as "SD" or "super deformed" characters), which allowed the different heroes and villains to co-exist and interact with each other without the need to reconcile their contrasting styles, settings, or sizes. The first game in the series, SD Battle Ōzumō: Heisei Hero Basho for the Famicom, which mixed franchises that were originally licensed to Popy, was developed as a congratulatory present to Yukimasa Sugiura when he was promoted to president of Banpresto at the time,[1] which was soon followed by series of spin-offs and related games featuring the same cast of characters that developed into the Compati Hero Series. The crossover was also possible due to Banpresto's parent company Bandai holding the merchandising rights for all the properties associated with this series.

The series was successful with children thanks to the SD Gundam craze, but after the release of Charinko Hero for the GameCube, there were no new games afterward for nearly eight years. Banpresto released a new game in the series titled Lost Heroes, for the Nintendo 3DS and the PlayStation Portable on September 2012.

List of video games

The Great Battle

Early games
  • SD Battle Ōzumō: Heisei Hero Basho (Famicom - April 20, 1990)
  • SD Hero Soukessen: Taose! Aku no Gundan (Famicom - July 7, 1990)
  • Great Battle Cyber (Famicom - December 25, 1992)
Main series
  • SD The Great Battle (Super Famicom - December 29, 1991)
  • The Great Battle II: Last Fighter Twin (Super Famicom - March 27, 1992)[2]
  • The Great Battle III (Super Famicom - March 26, 1993)[2]
  • The Great Battle IV (Super Famicom - December 17, 1994)[2]
  • The Great Battle V (Super Famicom - December 22, 1995)[2]
  • The Great Battle VI (PlayStation - April 11, 1997)
  • The Great Battle Pocket (Game Boy Color - December 3, 1999) (developed by Alpha Unit)
  • Great Battle Fullblast (PlayStation Portable - March 1, 2012)
  • The Great Battle Force (PlayStation 4 - TBA)
  • Lost Heroes (Nintendo 3DS, PlayStation Portable - September 6, 2012)
  • Lost Heroes 2 (Nintendo 3DS - February 2, 2015)[3]
Gaiden series
  • Tekkyu Fight! The Great Battle Gaiden (Game Boy - July 30, 1993)
  • The Great Battle Gaiden 2: Matsuri da Wasshoi (Super Famicom - January 28, 1994)
Derivative games
  • Super Iron Ball Fight! (Super Famicom - September 15, 1995)
  • Battle Crusher (Game Boy - January 27, 1995)
  • Battle Pinball (Super Famicom - February 24, 1995)
  • Ganbare! Compati Heroes Bokurano (Sega Pico - 1996)
  • Heroes' VS (PlayStation Portable - 2013)

Compati Sports Series

Individual games
  • Versus Hero: Road to the King Fight (Game Boy - August 7, 1992)
  • Battle Baseball (Famicom - February 19, 1993)
  • Battle Racers (Super Famicom - March 17, 1995)
  • Charinko Hero (GameCube - July 17, 2003)
Battle Dodgeball series
  • Battle Dodge Ball (Super Famicom - July 20, 1991)
  • Battle Dodge Ball (Game Boy - October 16, 1992)
  • Battle Dodge Ball II (Super Famicom - July 23, 1993)
  • Battle Dodge Ball III (PlayStation Portable - March 1, 2012)[4]
Battle Soccer series
Super Pachinko Taisen series
  • Super Pachinko Taisen (Super Famicom - April 28, 1995)
  • Super Pachinko Taisen (Game Boy - June 30, 1995)

RPG

gollark: I mean, if you have an `unsafe` block then unsafety can occur. But outside of this, it cannot, and you aren't going to have the !!FUN!! of any of your code potentially doing awful things.
gollark: Not accidentally, though.
gollark: You can, in theory, write non-unsafe C. People have repeatedly proven themselves to not be able to do this consistently.
gollark: It's wildly unsafe and not expressive.
gollark: C is indeed fairly bad.

See also

Notes

  1. Japanese: コンパチヒーローシリーズ Hepburn: Konpachi Hīrō Shirīzu
  2. "Compati" is short for "Compatible"

References

  1. Hamamura, Hirokazu. 『浜村通信 ゲーム業界を読み解く』 (Hanamura Tsūshin: Gēmu Gyōkai o Yomitoku, "Hanamura Journal: Deciphering the Video Game Industry") (in Japanese). Enterbrain. pp. 203–206.
  2. Lopes, Gonçalo (12 March 2018). "Zany Super Famicom Great Battle Series Gets Translated Into English". Nintendo Life (in Japanese). Gamer Network. Archived from the original on 24 September 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  3. James, Thomas (14 November 2014). "Lost Heroes 2's character lineup, gameplay systems unveiled". Gematsu. Archived from the original on 16 December 2019. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  4. Sherman, Jeniffer (16 November 2011). "Gundam, Ultraman, Kamen Rider Play Dodgeball Again on PSP". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on 24 October 2019.
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