I wasn't aware of this title, I saw a couple of videos and thought "cool!" and downloaded it right away.
Devil Engine is an horizontal scrolling shoot'em'up that takes a lot of inspiration from other classic and not-so-classic shooters: it's easy to see influences of R-Type (all of them...well, maybe not Leo), Darius, and even Last Hope (something I would urge everyone to stay away from, but I've never played Pink Bullets).
A brief tour of the options screen unveiled a lot of options, including the ability to set the analog stick's dead zone, show hitboxes, dim backgrounds, txt colour and so on. A lot of stuff is locked at firs, and the more you play, the more you unlock: visual filters (scanlines, "handheld port"), bullet colour, extra continues, additional game modes, and difficulty levels.
At first only arcade mode is available, and only playable in "very hard". The second difficulty mode, "very easy" is unlocked after the first game over. I must say that neither of these modes plays as its name: very easy is not all that easy but it's definitely easier than very hard, which can very well be normal mode because right now there's no harder mode to compare it with. And in both modes bosses go down rather easily if you spam the laser bomb.
Anyway, your ship has a three speed settings you can change at the push of a button, starts with a standard spread fire and by collecting powerups you can improve firepower or switch weapon between laser and homing. The bomb changes based on the weapon equipped and does not clear the screen from bullets or enemies, it's just a brief increase of firepower. There's a multiplier system that goes up as you defeat enemies and goes down when you don't. Bombing doesn't reset the multiplier but bursting does. Bursting allows to absorb nearby bullets, and with enough bullets the multiplier will be restored a bit. Bursting is also used to change powerup type, which is a questionnable mechanic, but for me the laser was good for the vast majority of occasions, with the spread being useful only in a couple of instances; I didn't particularly appreciate the homing as it goes all over the place.
Bombs come in quickly, every 5000 points, and you can spam them to kill bosses easily. I've only begun playing and I'm not paying much attention to recap screens after a stage, so I'm not entirely sure how bombing affects your score.
Stages are somwhat long, and you might have a lot of deja vus while playing: stage two seems straight out of Gallop. Stage structure is good, although there are few cheap shots: some new threats aren't properly introduced, for example one backdrop element in stage three seems only cosmetic at first but it's actually live and starts attacking right in the middle of an enemy wave with fast bullets that might be masked by other enemies or even your ship. Later in the stage off-screen attacks are only marked by a sound effect, which might pose a disadvantage if you don't have speakers or headphones.
I'm still not entirely sure about the bursting mechanic, it feels it's a last resort defence and nothing more, while it could have been tied tighter to the scoring mechanic, like still resetting the multiplier but granting more points per bullet absorbed; not having powerup selection dependent on bursting would have also been great, I can see the developers tried to design stages around the available weapons, but instead I've ended up avoid all powerups once I got the laser fully powered up, knowing that persevering during stages with that weapon would make bosses go down...well, a bit too easier even in the so-called "very hard" mode.
Not a fan of spamming bombs to annihilate bosses but you can skip several of their stages by doing that.
Graphics are cool, clearly inspired by '80s anime and 16-bit shooters, although level of detail doesn't quite reach any Megadrive or SNES title; I'd say that even some PCE titles look more elaborate than Devil Engine. Music is awesome, a perfect fit for all stages. The game controls well with an arcade stick and if you play with a normal pad all actions have alternate buttons and everything can be reconfigured in the options menu.
Devil Engine looks like a competent shooter, but probably the videos I seen before buying it got me a bit over-hyped. Maybe I was expecting Gates Of Thunder, instead I got a slower-paced shooter with heavy influences from several other games. It's not bad, it's just that I was expecting something different. But right now I'm not disappointed in having bought it.
Devil Engine is an horizontal scrolling shoot'em'up that takes a lot of inspiration from other classic and not-so-classic shooters: it's easy to see influences of R-Type (all of them...well, maybe not Leo), Darius, and even Last Hope (something I would urge everyone to stay away from, but I've never played Pink Bullets).
A brief tour of the options screen unveiled a lot of options, including the ability to set the analog stick's dead zone, show hitboxes, dim backgrounds, txt colour and so on. A lot of stuff is locked at firs, and the more you play, the more you unlock: visual filters (scanlines, "handheld port"), bullet colour, extra continues, additional game modes, and difficulty levels.
At first only arcade mode is available, and only playable in "very hard". The second difficulty mode, "very easy" is unlocked after the first game over. I must say that neither of these modes plays as its name: very easy is not all that easy but it's definitely easier than very hard, which can very well be normal mode because right now there's no harder mode to compare it with. And in both modes bosses go down rather easily if you spam the laser bomb.
Anyway, your ship has a three speed settings you can change at the push of a button, starts with a standard spread fire and by collecting powerups you can improve firepower or switch weapon between laser and homing. The bomb changes based on the weapon equipped and does not clear the screen from bullets or enemies, it's just a brief increase of firepower. There's a multiplier system that goes up as you defeat enemies and goes down when you don't. Bombing doesn't reset the multiplier but bursting does. Bursting allows to absorb nearby bullets, and with enough bullets the multiplier will be restored a bit. Bursting is also used to change powerup type, which is a questionnable mechanic, but for me the laser was good for the vast majority of occasions, with the spread being useful only in a couple of instances; I didn't particularly appreciate the homing as it goes all over the place.
Bombs come in quickly, every 5000 points, and you can spam them to kill bosses easily. I've only begun playing and I'm not paying much attention to recap screens after a stage, so I'm not entirely sure how bombing affects your score.
Stages are somwhat long, and you might have a lot of deja vus while playing: stage two seems straight out of Gallop. Stage structure is good, although there are few cheap shots: some new threats aren't properly introduced, for example one backdrop element in stage three seems only cosmetic at first but it's actually live and starts attacking right in the middle of an enemy wave with fast bullets that might be masked by other enemies or even your ship. Later in the stage off-screen attacks are only marked by a sound effect, which might pose a disadvantage if you don't have speakers or headphones.
I'm still not entirely sure about the bursting mechanic, it feels it's a last resort defence and nothing more, while it could have been tied tighter to the scoring mechanic, like still resetting the multiplier but granting more points per bullet absorbed; not having powerup selection dependent on bursting would have also been great, I can see the developers tried to design stages around the available weapons, but instead I've ended up avoid all powerups once I got the laser fully powered up, knowing that persevering during stages with that weapon would make bosses go down...well, a bit too easier even in the so-called "very hard" mode.
Not a fan of spamming bombs to annihilate bosses but you can skip several of their stages by doing that.
Graphics are cool, clearly inspired by '80s anime and 16-bit shooters, although level of detail doesn't quite reach any Megadrive or SNES title; I'd say that even some PCE titles look more elaborate than Devil Engine. Music is awesome, a perfect fit for all stages. The game controls well with an arcade stick and if you play with a normal pad all actions have alternate buttons and everything can be reconfigured in the options menu.
Devil Engine looks like a competent shooter, but probably the videos I seen before buying it got me a bit over-hyped. Maybe I was expecting Gates Of Thunder, instead I got a slower-paced shooter with heavy influences from several other games. It's not bad, it's just that I was expecting something different. But right now I'm not disappointed in having bought it.
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