Ikaruga

Ikaruga
Ikaruga
Original arcade flyer
Developer(s)Treasure
Publisher(s)
Treasure
    • WW: Treasure (Arcade/X360/Steam)
Director(s)Hiroshi Iuchi
Producer(s)Masato Maegawa
Designer(s)Yasushi Suzuki
Programmer(s)Atsutomo Nakagawa
Composer(s)Hiroshi Iuchi
Platform(s)Arcade, Dreamcast, GameCube, Xbox 360, Windows, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4
Release
20 December 2001
  • Arcade
    • JP: 20 December 2001
    • JP: 8 August 2013
    (NESiCAxLive)
    Dreamcast
    • JP: 5 September 2002
    GameCube
    • JP: 16 January 2003
    • NA: 15 April 2003
    • PAL: 9 May 2003
    Xbox 360
    • WW: 9 April 2008
    Windows
    • WW: 18 February 2014
    Nintendo Switch
    • WW: 29 May 2018
    PlayStation 4
    • WW: 29 June 2018
Genre(s)Shoot 'em up
Mode(s)Single-player, 2-player cooperative
Arcade systemSega NAOMI

Ikaruga (Japanese: 斑鳩, lit.'Japanese Grosbeak') is a shoot 'em up developed by Treasure. It is the spiritual sequel to Radiant Silvergun (1998) and was originally released in Japanese arcades in December 2001. The story follows a rebel pilot named Shinra as he battles an enemy nation using a specially designed fighter called the Ikaruga which can flip between two polarities, black and white. This polarity mechanism is the game's key feature and the foundation for its stage and enemy design. All enemies and bullets in the game are either black or white. Bullets which are the same color as the player are absorbed while the others will kill the player. The game features both single-player and cooperative modes.

Development on Ikaruga began during director Hiroshi Iuchi's off-hours while Treasure was busy developing Sin and Punishment (2000). Titled "Project RS2", the game began as a sequel to Radiant Silvergun, and borrows many elements from it as well as the polarity mechanism from Treasure's Silhouette Mirage (1997). During the game's prototype stages, the player's ammo was limited. The bullet absorption mechanism was used as a means to refill ammo. However, this was found to be weak as it created too many breaks in the action so it was later added as an additional mode in home ports. In tradition with Treasure's game design philosophy, Ikaruga was intentionally crafted to challenge the conventions of standard game design and develop a new type of shooting game. All together, five Treasure staff worked on Ikaruga, as well as three support staff from G.rev.

Upon its initial release in Japanese arcades, reception was mixed. Treasure staff explained this was due to players expecting a more standard shooter offering but instead being greeted with a different game system that featured more puzzle-like elements rather than the twitch gameplay of bullet-dodging. In 2002, Ikaruga was ported to the Dreamcast in Japan and began to grow a cult following from import gamers worldwide. It was later released in the West in 2003 on the GameCube, receiving positive reviews. Critics praised the graphics as well as the art and sound design. Some criticism was directed towards its difficulty. Most critics felt the unique game design choices were innovative, while some believed they stifled many of the classic shooter elements. Ikaruga was later ported to the Xbox 360, Windows, Nintendo Switch, and PlayStation 4. In retrospect, Ikaruga is regarded by critics as one of the best games ever made, especially in the shoot 'em up genre, and one of Treasure's greatest works.
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