Space Ace

Space Ace is a LaserDisc video game produced by Bluth Group, Cinematronics and Advanced Microcomputer Systems (later renamed RDI Video Systems). It was unveiled in October 1983, just four months after the Dragon's Lair game, followed by a limited release in December 1983 and then a wide release in Spring 1984. Like its predecessor, it featured film-quality animation played back from a LaserDisc.

Space Ace
North American arcade flyer
Developer(s)Advanced Microcomputer Systems
Publisher(s)Cinematronics
Digital Leisure (current)
Producer(s)Rick Dyer
Don Bluth
Designer(s)Don Bluth
Platform(s)Arcade, Amiga, Apple IIGS, 3DO, CD-i, Jaguar CD, Macintosh, MS-DOS, Atari ST, Sega CD, DVD Player, Blu-ray, Wii, DSiWare, iOS, PlayStation 3, Android, Switch
Release
Genre(s)Interactive movie
Mode(s)Up to 2 players, alternating turns

The gameplay is similar to Dragon's Lair, requiring the player to move the joystick or press the fire button at key moments in the animated sequences to govern the hero's actions. There is also the occasional option to either temporarily have the character transform into his adult form or remain as a boy with different styles of challenge.

The arcade game was a commercial success in North America, but was unable to achieve the same level of success as Dragon's Lair.[4] It was later ported to a number of home systems.

Gameplay

Arcade version screenshot.

Like Dragon's Lair, Space Ace is composed of numerous individual scenes, which require the player to move the joystick in the right direction or press the fire button at the right moment to overcome the various hazards Dexter/Ace faces. Space Ace introduced a few gameplay enhancements, most notably selectable skill levels and multiple paths through several of the scenes. At the start of the game, the player could select one of three skill levels: "Cadet", "Captain" or "Space Ace" for easy, medium and hard respectively; only by choosing the toughest skill level could the player see all the sequences in the game (only around half the scenes are played on the easiest setting). A number of the scenes had "multiple choice" moments when the player could select how to act, sometimes by deciding which way to turn in a passageway, or by choosing whether or not to react to the on-screen "ENERGIZE" message and transform back into his Ace form.[5] Most scenes also have separate, horizontally flipped versions. Dexter usually progresses through scenes by avoiding obstacles and enemies, but Ace goes on the offensive, attacking enemies rather than running away; although Dexter does occasionally have to use his pistol on enemies when it is necessary to advance. An example can be seen in the first scene of the game, when Dexter is escaping from Borf's robot drones. If the player presses the fire button at the right moment, Dexter transforms temporarily into Ace and can fight them, whereas if the player chooses to stay as Dexter, the robots' drill attacks must be dodged instead.

Plot

Space Ace follows the adventures of the dashing hero Dexter, better known as "Ace". Ace is on a mission to stop the villainous Commander Borf, who is seeking to attack Earth with his "Infanto Ray" to render Earthlings helpless by reverting them into infants. At the start of the game, Ace is partially hit by the Infanto Ray, which reverts him into an adolescent, and Borf kidnaps his female sidekick Kimberly, who thus becomes the game's damsel in distress. It is up to the player to guide Ace, in his adolescent form of Dexter, through a series of obstacles in pursuit of Borf, in order to rescue Kimberly and prevent Borf from using the Infanto Ray to conquer Earth. However, Dexter has a wristwatch gadget which optionally allows him to "ENERGIZE" and temporarily reverse the effects of the Infanto-Ray, to turn him back into Ace for a short time and overcome more difficult obstacles in a heroic manner. The game's attract mode introduces the player to the story via narration and dialogue.

Voices

  • Will Finn as Dexter/Baby Borf
  • Jeff Etter as Ace
  • Lorna Cook as Kimberly
  • Don Bluth as Borf/Aliens/Dark Side Dexter/Dark Side Ace
  • Michael Rye as Narrator

Development

The animation for Space Ace was produced by the same team that tackled the earlier Dragon's Lair, headed by ex-Disney animator Don Bluth. To keep the production costs down, the studio again chose to use its staff to provide voices for the characters rather than hire actors (one exception is Michael Rye, who reprises his role as the narrator of the attract sequence in Dragon's Lair). Bluth himself provides the (electronically altered) voice of Commander Borf. In an interview about the game, Bluth stated that had the studio been able to afford more professional actors, he thought Paul Shenar would have been more suitable for the role of Borf than himself. The game's animation features some rotoscoping, wherein models were built of Ace's spaceship "Star Pac", his motorcycle, and the tunnel in the game's dogfight sequence, then filmed and traced over to render moving animated images with very realistic depth and perspective.

The game's budget was $2.5 million.[6]

Format

Space Ace was made available to distributors in two different formats: a dedicated cabinet, and a conversion kit that could be used to turn an existing copy of Dragon's Lair into a Space Ace game. Early version #1 production units of the dedicated Space Ace game were actually issued in Dragon's Lair style cabinets. The latter version #2 dedicated Space Ace units came in a different, inverted style cabinet. The conversion kit included the Space Ace laserdisc, new EPROMs containing the game program, an additional circuit board to add the skill level buttons, and replacement artwork for the cabinet. The game originally used the Pioneer LD-V1000 or PR-7820 laserdisc players, but an adaptor kit now exists to allow Sony LDP series players to be used as replacements if the original player is no longer functional.

Ports

Numerous versions of Space Ace were created for home computers and game systems, most of which attempted to mimic the arcade version's lushly animated hand-drawn footage, with varying degrees of success. Along with the floppy disk-based versions for Amiga, Apple IIGS, Atari ST, MS-DOS and Macintosh, ReadySoft issued a CD-ROM version featuring downsampled video for MS-DOS and Macintosh which preserved almost all of the original laserdisc content. A sequel, Space Ace II: Borf's Revenge, was created and shipped on floppy disk for the aforementioned computer platforms mixing new animation with scenes from the original game that were left out of the previous version due to large file sizes.

The Atari ST version of the game which used 4 floppy disks

In 1991, Leland Corporation released a slightly updated version of Space Ace in the form of a conversion kit for the then recently released Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp. The updated version added more complicated moves (including diagonal moves), and dropped the easier skill levels, meaning only the "Ace" (difficult) level could be played.

In 1993, Space Ace was released for the Philips CD-i (Compact Disc Interactive). It was later released on the Sega CD in 1994.

Space Ace was also released for the SNES by Absolute Entertainment in 1994 under the same name. However, since a SNES cartridge has limited storage, it ended up being a top-down perspective action game with levels based on the scenes from the original. In order to see the credits, the player must get an "Ace" rank on every level, meaning that they must have near-perfect accuracy and collect all the disks found throughout the game.

The Dragon's Lair Deluxe Pack released by Digital Leisure in 1997 featured Space Ace along with both arcade Dragon's Lair games. They also released a version of Space Ace on DVD that could be played on most DVD players, although it lacked the skill level select of the arcade version, and also played somewhat differently (if the player made a mistake on the arcade version they simply picked up again roughly where they left off, whereas the DVD version made the player replay the entire scene from the beginning).

DAPHNE, an emulator for laserdisc based games, can emulate both the original and 1991 versions. It requires the ROM files plus the original laserdisc to run. Alternatively, an MPEG-2 video stream and Ogg Vorbis audio stream can be substituted for the laserdisc. These streams can be generated from the original laserdisc or from Digital Leisure's DVD.

As with Dragon's Lair, a comic book miniseries incorporating elements from both the game and its Saturday Supercade version (such as Ace randomly changing into Dexter and back, instead of "energizing" back into Ace) was released in 2003 by Crossgen Publishing.

In the December 2003 issues of PSW (PlayStation World) and XBW (Xbox World), a free disk was given away with the magazine featuring Space Ace on one side (accompanied by trailers for similar games), and trailers for upcoming games on the other.

In May 2009, the game was made available on iOS.

In October 2010, Space Ace appeared on Wii as part of the Dragon's Lair Trilogy, which also features Dragon's Lair and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp. It was later released as DSiWare in North America on December 6 and in the PAL region on December 31.

The PlayStation 3 port by Digital Leisure was released through the PlayStation Network on February 22, 2011.

An Android port of the game was released on December 28, 2012 via Google Play.[7]

In August 2013, the game was made available through Steam.[8][9]

In July 2015, Rebecca Heineman released the source code from a reverse engineered Apple IIGS version (dating back from 1990) on GitHub.[10][11]

There is a compilation sold on the PlayStation Store also called Dragon's Lair Trilogy, which contains the original Dragon's Lair, Space Ace, and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp as a set.[12]

Space Ace appeared on Nintendo Switch as part of the Dragon's Lair Trilogy (a possible port of the Wii release), which also features Dragon's Lair and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp in January 2019.[13]

An NES version of Space Ace was developed, but never released.[14]

In July/August 2022, Brutal Deluxe developed and released a improved version of the existing Space Ace port,[15] as well a new port of Space Ace II: Borg's Revenge, for the Apple IIGS (the latter reportedly completed in 1991 by ReadySoft, but never released)

Reception

In the United Kingdom, it was the top-selling CD-i game in April 1994.[26]

The four reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the CD-i version a 7.75 out of 10. They described it as a "pixel perfect" conversion of the arcade game, though they criticized that the game lacks replay value.[22]

In their review of the Sega CD version, GamePro gave the game an overall score of 3.9 out of 5, remarking that the game 'unfortunately highlights the color bleeding of the Sega CD', but praised the story, voicing, and music, and concluded "Space Ace is great for animation buffs or gamers who enjoyed Dragon's Lair".[21] Next Generation gave the Sega CD version two out of five stars, criticizing the game's story as "juvenile" and the gameplay as 'overly limited': "The only way to beat any of the game's 13 stages is to play through it over and over until your reactions are automatic. You could surely train a monkey to do the same thing".[24]

A reviewer for Next Generation gave the PC version two out of five stars, commenting that "Don Bluth's LaserDisc classic remains an entertaining cartoon attached to the antithesis of interactivity. ... Space Ace does manage to come out looking and sounding almost exactly like the original arcade adventure, but in the end, that's not necessarily a good thing".[24]

Entertainment Weekly gave the game a B- and wrote that "Space Ace is part of a unique genre of CD games, the so-called decision point disc, in which, instead of controlling your character's every movement, you respond to specific threats. But Space Ace is a mixed blessing at best. It features terrific Don Bluth animation and an amusing plot involving the evil Commander Borf and his Infanto Ray. On the other hand, thanks to very tricky timing, it's such a frustrating experience you may want to turn the disc into a Frisbee".[23]

Legacy

Sequel

Space Ace II: Borf's Revenge is a continuation of the home computer version of Space Ace, mostly featuring content that could not fit in available storage space on said version. It was released for Amiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS and Macintosh in 1991. An Apple IIGS port was also completed, but never released (detailed IIGS loading instructions appear in the manual for the other ports).[27] A new Apple IIGS conversion was developed and released by Brutal Deluxe in 2022, based on the DOS version.[28]

A short-lived cartoon series based on Space Ace was produced in 1984 as part of the Saturday Supercade cartoon block (which was composed of animated shorts based on then-current video games) with Ace voiced by Jim Piper, Dexter voiced by Sparky Marcus, Kimberly voiced by Nancy Cartwright, and Commander Borf voiced by Arthur Burghardt. Twelve Space Ace episodes were produced.[29] The episodes were once shown on Cartoon Network and afterward were sometimes shown as filler on Boomerang's Boomeraction block. Hanho Heung-Up Co., Ltd. contributed some animation for this series.

Samurai Jack references Space Ace and the other Don Bluth-animated arcade game, Dragon's Lair, in a scene from the episode "Jack and the Dragon". When Jack asks which path to take to reach a dragon's lair, he is told the left; when he asks what the right path leads to, Jack is told, "Space Ace".

References

  1. "Space Ace (Registration Number PA0000234328)". United States Copyright Office. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  2. "Arcade Action: News of the Newcomers". Computer and Video Games. No. 31 (May 1984). United Kingdom: EMAP. 16 April 1984. pp. 34–5.
  3. "Space Ace". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  4. Sharpe, Roger C. (December 15, 1984). "1984—Every Which Way But Up". Play Meter. Vol. 10, no. 23. pp. 39, 49–51.
  5. "Space Ace". The International Arcade Museum. Retrieved 5 Oct 2013.
  6. Albert, George (March 2, 1984). "Heroic rescues make game fun". The Palm Beach Post. p. 113. Retrieved March 8, 2022 via Newspapers.com.
  7. Huff, Andrew (December 24, 2012). "Dragon's Lair's futuristic cousin Space Ace flies onto Google Play". Chrome by Google. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  8. "Space Ace - The hit Retro interactive game classic is now available on Steam!". Indie Retro News. August 27, 2013.
  9. "Space Ace on Steam". Steam. Digital Leisure Inc.
  10. spaceaceiigs on GitHub - Reverse-engineered source code of Space Ace released in July 2015. Rebecca Heineman.
  11. Garcia, Paulo (July 10, 2015). "'Space Ace' source code for the Apple IIGS has been released". Vintage is the New Old.
  12. "Dragon's Lair Trilogy on Playstation Store". Playstation. Digital Leisure Inc.
  13. Doolan, Liam (May 21, 2019). "Limited Run Games Releasing Dragon's Lair Trilogy Collector's Edition". Nintendo Life. Nlife Media.
  14. Space Ace (unreleased NES port of arcade game; early 1990s)
  15. "Brutal Deluxe re-releases Space Ace for Apple IIGS". Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  16. Brett Alan Weiss. "Space Ace (Arcade) Review". Allgame. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  17. Miller, Skyler. "Space Ace (DVD Video) Review". Allgame. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  18. Michael L. House. "Space Ace (PC) Review". Allgame. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  19. Lisa Karen Savignano. "Space Ace (Macintosh) Review". Allgame. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  20. Christopher Michael Baker. "Space Ace (Sega CD) Review". Allgame. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  21. Scary Larry (March 1995). "Space Ace". GamePro. No. 68. IDG. p. 58.
  22. "Review Crew: Space Ace". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 57. Sendai Publishing. April 1994. p. 44.
  23. Strauss, Bob (June 17, 1994). "Space Ace". Entertainment Weekly. Time Inc.
  24. "Space Ace". Next Generation. No. 4. Imagine Media. April 1995. pp. 92&94.
  25. Fletcher, Dexter (May 1994). "Space Ace CD-i Review". CD-i. Haymarket Publishing (5): 8–11. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  26. "All the Charts on All the Formats" (PDF). Computer & Video Games. No. 151 (June 1994). Future plc. 15 May 1994. pp. 126–128.
  27. "Space Ace II Borfs Revenge manual".
  28. "Brutal Deluxe releases Space Ace II: Borf's Revenege for Apple IIGS". Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  29. "Space Ace / Game". TV Tropes. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
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