The Ocean Hunter
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "infobox".Template:Italic titleScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Script error: No such module "Nihongo". (also known as The Ocean Hunter: The Seven Seas Adventure) is a 1998 shooting gallery game developed and published by Sega.[1] The Ocean Hunter runs on Sega Model 3 hardware. The cabinet features artistic renditions of the bosses of the game, some with faux Greek names: Οχτοπυσ (actual Greek would be Όκτώπους); Λεϖιατηαν (actual Greek would be Λευιαθάν) and Χψχλοπσ (actual Greek would be Κύκλωψ).[2]
Plot
A new civilization is flourishing in the seas of an alternate steampunk world, but giant ocean monsters are attacking shipping vessels, harbors, humans and native marine life with increasing frequency. Ordinary marine predators such as sharks have begun to follow in the sea monsters' wake to scavenge what they could from the destruction caused. Frightened for their lives, the people issue bounties on the monsters' heads. The underwater adventurers Torel (Player 1) and Chris (Player 2) head out to defeat the horrible creatures.
Gameplay
The Ocean Hunter is played by using two mounted turret-like guns on the arcade cabinet. The game is capable of being played with either one or two people simultaneously. The player takes the role of an underwater adventurer searching for the Seven Great Monsters of the Seven Seas, hoping to collect the bounties placed on their heads for attacks on shipping vessels, humans and native marine life. The player proceeds to go throughout the game in a set path, shooting at various hostile ocean life along the way. The game is played progressing through various levels, each with its own design and layout, often incorporating the idea of sunken ships, underwater temples or cities of civilizations long gone. Upon reaching the end of the level, a boss is encountered. Each boss is named after a famous mythological sea monster with the final boss taking on different forms named Dagon, Poseidon, and Rahab. There are also mini-bosses in the game, many of whom are also named after sea monsters or mythological creatures.
The Seven Seas are listed therein as:
- Baroque Sea (Pacific Ocean); boss Kraken (Octpus dofleini [sic]); reward File:The Ocean Hunter currency sign.svg5,000.
- Luna Sea (Arabian Sea); boss Leviathan (Carcharodon megalodon); reward File:The Ocean Hunter currency sign.svg8,000.
- Tartarus Deep (Bermuda Triangle); boss Charybdis (Melanocetus); reward File:The Ocean Hunter currency sign.svg10,000.
- Texcoco Great Lake (Amazon River); boss Ahuizotl (Elasmosaurus platyurus); reward File:The Ocean Hunter currency sign.svg12,000.
- North Sea (Arctic Ocean); boss Karkinos (Macrocheira kaempferi); reward File:The Ocean Hunter currency sign.svg15,000.
- West Ocean (Atlantic Ocean); boss Midgardsorm (Lumbricus terrestris gigantesque [sic]); reward File:The Ocean Hunter currency sign.svg18,000.
- Panthalassa (Mediterranean Sea); final boss Rahab (Gigantopithecus thalassa cyclops); reward File:The Ocean Hunter currency sign.svg20,000.
After Rahab is defeated, he reveals in the game’s closing sequence that he was responsible for creating the sea monsters (except Midgardsorm, who possibly existed before the events of the game) in order to protect the oceans from human-induced pollution, and warns the player that he will return someday.
Reception
In Japan, Game Machine listed The Ocean Hunter on their 15 November 1998 issue as being the fifth most-successful dedicated arcade game of the month.[3]
See also
References
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External links
- Pages with script errors
- Articles using Infobox video game using locally defined parameters
- Articles using Wikidata infoboxes with locally defined images
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- 1998 video games
- Arcade video games
- Arcade-only video games
- Cooperative video games
- Multiplayer and single-player video games
- Rail shooters
- Sega arcade games
- Video games developed in Japan
- Video games set underwater