Hero Core

Hero Core is a freeware shooter game created by Daniel Remar, the developer of Iji.[2][3] The game was released on 3 May 2010. It was created in Game Maker Studio, with music composed by Brother Android.[4] It is a sequel to the game Hero.[5] Around 2013 the source code of the game was made available to the public.[6]

Hero Core
Developer(s)Daniel Remar
ReleaseMay 3, 2010
Genre(s)Shooter, Metroidvania[1]

Gameplay

Hero Core is a "Metroidvania" styled shooter,[7] where the player controls Flip Hero, and using two fire buttons, navigates his way through Cruiser Tetron's asteroid base. The ultimate goal of Hero Core is to get to the center of the asteroid base, and defeat the Machine Warlord, Cruiser Tetron.

Plot

The game's plot concerns Flip Hero, a robot who has turned on his former master, Cruiser Tetron, and has been given the task of destroying Tetron in order to save Earth. Every time Flip Hero succeeds in defeating his foe, Tetron's robotic minions rebuild him, locking them in constant battle. The events of Hero Core portray the end of this cycle. Although the game briefly explores the relationship between master and servant turned foes, these examinations are fleeting because the game is primarily focused on gameplay rather than plot.[7]

Players may either attempt to fight Cruiser Tetron immediately after starting the game or explore the asteroid base, fighting powerful enemy bosses and collecting items to improve their chances of success against Tetron. If the player can find all 10 secret computers in the base and defeat Tetron, it triggers an ending in which Tetron and his minions are permanently obliterated in an explosion caused by Flip Hero.[7]

gollark: I only have maybe 20GB of data I actually care about, but because it's mixed in with all the stuff I don't and because I'm lazy I have basically no backups. One day I'll fix that. One day.
gollark: But I *like* giant glass cuboids…
gollark: We already have tags which let you store information about stuff on them (NFC or RFID or something, I forgot what), just not position finding on them yet.
gollark: 2.5" ones do tend to be more expensive per TB.
gollark: SSDs are surprisingly robust. I've (anecdotally) had one working fine for standard desktop use for about four years and it seems to still be fine (SMART says it's still 95% okay or something).

References

  1. Meunier, Nathan (May 6, 2010). "Free Bytes: Hero Core". IGN. Retrieved July 13, 2016. Battle space bots in this sweet Metroidvania-style freeware adventure.
  2. Meunier, Nathan (6 May 2010). "Free Bytes: Hero Core". IGN. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  3. Dugan, Patrick (28 May 2010). "Hero Core". Play This Thing. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  4. "Hero Core OST (Stereo Expanded Edition)".
  5. Gillen, Kieron (4 May 2010). "You Are Hero Core. You Make Me – Er – Hero". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  6. resources on remar.se "remarsource.zip"
  7. Murff, James (14 May 2010). "Freeware Friday: Hero Core". Big Download. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.