Corpse Killer

Corpse Killer is a game released for the Sega CD, Sega CD 32X, 3DO, Sega Saturn, Windows 95 and Macintosh computers that features live-action full motion video in a format similar to other games developed by Digital Pictures. It was later remastered for Steam and PlayStation 4. Corpse Killer was the first CD game released for the Sega 32X.[1][2]

Corpse Killer
Developer(s)Digital Pictures
Publisher(s)Digital Pictures
Screaming Villains (PS4, Steam)
Limited Run Games (PS4 retail)
Platform(s)Sega CD, Sega CD 32X, 3DO, Saturn, Windows, Macintosh, PlayStation 4
ReleaseSega CD
Saturn
  • NA: November 10, 1995
32X
3DO
  • NA: 1994
  • JP: August 25, 1995
PlayStation 4, Windows (Steam)
  • WW: July 30, 2019
Genre(s)Action, survival horror
Mode(s)Single-player

Footage from the game was later recycled for the 2003 film Game Over.

Cast

Story

An unnamed United States Marine is airdropped onto a tropical island on a top secret mission to stop the evil Dr. Hellman, who plans to release his army of zombies on the world. He is bitten by a zombie and also meets an attractive female reporter and a Rastafarian male driver. Four of the marine lieutenant's comrades are captured by Hellman and turned into zombies. To rescue them, the lieutenant infiltrates Hellman's compound and shoots each of them with bullets coated with extract from Datura plants, which can turn freshly-created zombies back into humans.

Gameplay

Most of the gameplay is similar to other shooting full motion video games such as Lethal Enforcers. The player moves through the jungle shooting various zombies, collecting better ammunition (to prepare for a raid on Hellman's compound) and medicine to recover health.

Development

John Lafia directed the live-action footage, which was filmed on location in the Caribbean,[3] with most scenes being shot in Puerto Rico.[4] The actors portraying the zombies wore latex masks.[4]

Sega Saturn features

The Sega Saturn version of the title was released with the subtitle of "Graveyard Edition". This version features a few exclusives such as a full-screen video (other versions have the FMV boxed in), improved video quality, a difficulty selection (ranging from normal to bloodthirsty to cannibal), items and power-ups that drop down from the top of the screen and can be shot and collected, and "in your face" zombie attacks. These attacks involve a zombie that pops up immediately in front of the "camera" and attacks the player. They can only be killed with armor-piercing rounds or Datura rounds. The Saturn version is also the only version of the game to lack light gun support (though there is no mention of light guns in the manual or packaging for the 3DO version, it does in fact include light gun support).

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
EGM5.25/10 (32X)[1]
4.375/10 (SAT)[5]
Next Generation (32X, SAT)[2][6]

Reviewing the Sega CD version, GamePro's Game Over Man wrote that "This frisky first-person blast-a-thon looks and feels like a bad live-action movie. But your taste for 'bad' just might bring this Corpse to life." He particularly praised the B-movie production values, "typically grainy but stylish" FMV graphics, and the effective controls even when using a standard gamepad instead of a light gun.[7]

The four reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly said that the "campy, bad b-movie" cutscenes are entertaining but the gameplay is dull, and that the graphics are only slightly improved from the Sega CD version.[1] A reviewer for Next Generation commented that the game itself is "decent", but that the improvement in graphics over the Sega CD version "is so small that only an expert could notice."[2] Toxic Tommy of GamePro reviewed that the 32X version retains the elements that made the Sega CD version fun and has far better graphics.[8]

Electronic Gaming Monthly reversed their position on the game's cutscenes when reviewing the Saturn version, with all save Andrew Baran now saying that the scenes are dull and repetitive. They also criticized the substandard video quality of the FMV and the "laughable" gameplay.[5] GamePro's brief review, while acknowledging the FMV is grainy, noted it was at least superior to any previous version of the game. The reviewer praised the cursor movement's easy control and concluded, "This'll do for zombified Saturn gamers."[9] A brief review from Next Generation published over a year after the game's release criticized the "cheesy graphics and extremely repetitious gameplay".[6]

Re-release

William Mesa, Flash Film Works and Screaming Villains remastered the game from the original source material in 2019 and re-released it as a "25th Anniversary Edition" for Steam, and PlayStation 4. It was also released in physical PS4 media by Limited Run Games.[10] The new version contained several hours' worth of behind-the-scenes video from the original production as well as hundreds of still images, the original production script and other assorted documents.

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References

  1. "Review Crew: Corpse Killer". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 68. Sendai Publishing. March 1995. p. 36.
  2. "Shoot It!". Next Generation. No. 4. Imagine Media. April 1995. p. 90.
  3. "Corpse Killer". GamePro. No. 75. IDG. December 1994. p. 268.
  4. "Day of the Zombies". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 63. Sendai Publishing. October 1994. pp. 126–127.
  5. "Review Crew: Corpse Killer". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 77. Sendai Publishing. December 1995. p. 44.
  6. "Every Sega Saturn Game Played, Reviewed, and Rated". Next Generation. No. 25. Imagine Media. January 1997. p. 63.
  7. "ProReview: Corpse Killer". GamePro. No. 76. IDG. January 1995. p. 56.
  8. "ProReview: Corpse Killer". GamePro. No. 78. IDG. March 1995. p. 60.
  9. "Quick Hits: Corpse Killers: The Graveyard Edition [sic]". GamePro. No. 90. IDG. March 1996. p. 73.
  10. Romano, Sal (June 10, 2019). "Corpse Killer: 25th Anniversary Edition announced for PS4, PC". gematsu.com. Retrieved June 10, 2019.
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