Post by JUNKER on Jul 30, 2007 2:24:41 GMT -5
In the early 90's, when I was a small child. I thought this game was THE sh*t. First time I played it was when my older brother rented the Genesis version, and I f...cking loved it. The digitized graphics, the music, the voices, everything. It was fun to play back in 1992/93, and it's still fun to play to this day. Without it, we wouldn't have games like Time Crisis or Virtua Cop or any of those. The game is set in modern day Chicago. You're a newly recruited police officer, and you're objective is simple:Clean up the town from the scum that terrorize it. There's 5 stages starting with foiling a simple bank robbery, followed by stopping an assault on Chinatown by a gang of assassins, then a hijack at the airport, a drug deal at the harbor, and then a showdown at the chemical plant. There's also these shooting practice stages every now and then. There's 6 different ranks in the game. You start off as a Patrolman, and you work your way up to Detective, Sergeant, Captain, Lieutenant, and if you do REALLY good, Commander. But don't shoot any civilians, because you'll get dropped a rank if you do. I have the game for the Super Nintendo, Sega CD, and I recently bought the Deluxe Pack for the PlayStation One. The SNES, Genesis and Sega CD games came with a blue light gun called "The Justifier", and it kicks ass. I feel like a total badass every time I play with The Justifier. Anyway, when it comes to non-arcade versions, I'd say the SNES one is superior in more ways than one. The graphics obviously look better, the music sounds just like it does in the arcade, you get to pick where you want to go first, like in the arcade version, and if you accidentally shoot a civilian, you don't have to replay the level again. This version also has some censorship, like when you kill enemies, they don't fall back or anything, they just stay in the same pose, and when you get shot or stabbed, what's supposed to be blood is white, so it looks like the bullets or knives hit glass or something. Also, Stage 2:Chinatown Assault was renamed "Downtown Assault". It's also called that in the japanese version of this port. And Stage 4:The Drug Deal is called "Gun Runners". But really, you're not gonna let a little censorship stop you now, are you? The Genesis is more violent than the SNES game, but the graphics look like sh*t, you can't pick what level you want to go to first, if you accidentally shoot ONE civilian, you have to re-do the level ALL OVER AGAIN, and that sucks. Plus the music sounds like crap. The Sega CD version is the same exact thing, only the music sounds different, and better. Plus that version also has an awesome CD quality soundtrack by Motoaki Furukawa and Tappi Iwase of Kukeiha Club. The music in the Sega CD version is completely re-arranged. So if you'd rather play the game on a Sega console, play the Sega CD one, and pass on the Genesis cart.
Bottom Line:Lethal Enforcers is one of the most important games in Konami's long history, and one of the greatest games of all time. Unfortunately, there weren't any other SNES games that used The Justifier, and the only other Sega titles that it was compatible with were "Lethal Enforcers II - Gun Fighters", and the shooting sequences in the swan song of Hideo Kojima's entire career:Snatcher.
TRIVIA:When you enter "OTANI" on JORDAN in Snatcher, you get a profile for a guy named "Masanori Otani", and he leaves a message saying "Shoot me in Lethal Enforcers." Otani plays the guys in the purple suits from "Chinatown Assault" in LE, and that's what that message is referring to. But I haven't been able to find any photos of this guy other than his digitized form in LE. He IS an employee of Konami, along with Kazuhiro Ueda, who plays the boss in Chinatown Assault.