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Sky Kid

Sky Kid
Japanese arcade flyer of Sky Kid.
Japanese arcade flyer of Sky Kid.
Developer(s) Namco
Epoch
Publisher(s)
Composer(s) Junko Ozawa
Platform(s) Arcade, Famicom/NES, Epoch Super Cassette Vision, Virtual Console
Release date(s) Arcade
  • JP: December 1985
Famicom/NES
  • JP: August 22, 1986
  • NA: September 1987
Epoch Super Cassette Vision
  • JP: December 1986
Virtual Console
Famicom/NES (Wii)
  • JP: April 1, 2008
  • NA: May 19, 2008
Arcade (Wii)
  • JP: July 7, 2009
Famicom/NES (3DS)
  • JP: April 4, 2013
  • NA: February 20, 2014
Famicom/NES (Wii U)
  • JP: March 4, 2015
  • NA: March 5, 2015
Genre(s) Horizontal scrolling shooter
Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously
Cabinet Upright, cabaret, and cocktail
Arcade system Namco Pac-Land
CPU 1x Motorola M6809 @ 1.536 MHz,
1x Hitachi HD63701 @ 1.536 MHz
Sound 1x Namco WSG @ 1.536 MHz
Display Horizontal orientation, Raster, 288 x 224 resolution

Sky Kid (スカイキッド Sukai Kiddo?) is a horizontal scrolling shooter arcade game that was released by Namco in 1985. It runs on Namco Pac-Land hardware but with a video system like that used in Dragon Buster. It is also the first game from Namco to allow two players to play simultaneously. The game was later released on the Famicom (brought to the American NES by Sunsoft), and both this version for the Wii, Nintendo 3DS and Wii U and the original arcade version for the Wii were later released on Nintendo's Virtual Console service.

A sequel named Sky Kid Deluxe was released in 1986. It introduced several new enemies and missions, was the first game to run on Namco's then-new Namco System 86 hardware, and was also the first game from the company that used a Yamaha YM2151 FM sound chip.

Sky Kid is a two-dimensional scrolling shooter game. The players take control of the Sky Kids, "Red Baron" and "Blue Max", which are references to Manfred von Richthofen, the famous World War I flying ace, and the prestigious order Pour le Mérite informally known as Blue Max. The Sky Kids fly around in biplanes and are assigned specific targets during the missions. These missions involve bombing specific targets. The "A" button is used to control the plane's machine gun and the "B" button is used to perform a loop. A number of obstacles face the players in each level. First, their biplane is not equipped with a bomb to complete their mission and must be picked up en route to the target. Second, there are both ground and air units that attempt to keep the Sky Kids from accomplishing their mission. Last, the Sky Kids may have to navigate through some very inhospitable terrain or navigate around cities in order to get to the target. The targets which the Sky Kids must bomb will either be fortress complexes, or ships. As the players advance further up in the 21 missions, multiple targets will begin to appear in the course of one mission. Players receive points for destroying air and ground targets, and receive additional points at the end of the mission for how many of these types of targets are destroyed. In addition, players get points based on how much of the target is destroyed - but only total destruction warrants an end-of-mission bonus.


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