Police 911
2000 video game / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Police 911, called The Keisatsukan (ザ・警察官, lit. The Police Officer) in Japan and Police 24/7 in Europe, is a series of light gun shooter arcade games. Konami released the first game in 2000.
Police 911 | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Konami |
Publisher(s) | Konami |
Director(s) | Masayuki Ohashi |
Producer(s) | Shigenobu Matsuyama |
Designer(s) | Masayuki Ohashi |
Programmer(s) | Nobuya Okuda |
Composer(s) | Jimmy Weckl |
Series | Lethal Enforcers |
Platform(s) | Arcade, PlayStation 2 |
Release | Arcade[1]
|
Genre(s) | Light gun shooter |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Arcade system | Konami Viper |
Unlike earlier light gun games, the game was unique for its motion sensing technology, sensing body movement rather than requiring the player to move individual controls; the player's "real world" actions are reflected by the player character within the game. It also featured a unique cover system, where the player takes cover by physically ducking for cover rather than pressing a button.[1] The 2001 Konami arcade game MoCap Boxing used similar motion-sensing technology.[3]
Although the game was a separate canon from the Lethal Enforcers series, Konami acknowledged Lethal Enforcers 3 as the successor to the Police 911 series, thus making it a canon in the Lethal Enforcers series.