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1993 video game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sonic the Hedgehog CD[lower-alpha 1], simply known as Sonic CD, is a 1993 platform game developed and published by Sega for the Sega CD. As Sonic the Hedgehog, the player attempts to protect an extraterrestrial body, Little Planet, from Doctor Robotnik. Like other Sonic games, Sonic runs through themed levels while collecting rings and defeating robots. Sonic CD introduces time travel as a game mechanic. By traveling through time, players can access different versions of stages, featuring alternative layouts, music, and graphics.
Sonic the Hedgehog CD | |
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Developer(s) | Sega |
Publisher(s) | Sega |
Director(s) | Naoto Ohshima |
Producer(s) |
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Programmer(s) | Matsuhide Mizoguchi |
Artist(s) |
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Composer(s) |
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Series | Sonic the Hedgehog |
Platform(s) | Sega CD, Windows, Android, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, iOS, Apple TV |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Platform |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Sonic CD began as a port of the Sega Genesis game Sonic the Hedgehog (1991), but developed into a separate project. Led by Sonic's co-creator Naoto Ohshima, the developers sought to show off the technical capabilities of the Sega CD. Sonic CD features the debuts of the recurring Sonic characters Amy Rose and Metal Sonic, and includes animated cutscenes created by Studio Junio. Two soundtracks were composed: the original soundtrack featured in the Japanese and European versions was composed by Naofumi Hataya and Masafumi Ogata, while the one in the North American version was composed by Spencer Nilsen, David Young, and Mark Crew.
Sonic CD was released in late 1993. It received critical acclaim and is often called one of the best Sonic platform games. Reviewers praised its size, music, and time travel feature, although some felt it did not fully use the Sega CD's capabilities. It sold over 1.5 million copies, making it the bestselling Sega CD game. Sonic CD was ported to Windows as part of the Sega PC label in 1996, and to the PlayStation 2 and GameCube as part of Sonic Gems Collection in 2005. A remake, developed by Christian Whitehead using the Retro Engine, was released for various platforms in 2011 and as part of the Sonic Origins compilation in 2022.
Sonic CD is a side-scrolling platform game similar to the original Sonic the Hedgehog. Players control Sonic the Hedgehog as he ventures to stop his nemesis Doctor Robotnik from obtaining the magical Time Stones and conquering Little Planet.[1] Like previous games, Sonic can destroy enemies and objects (such as certain walls and television monitors containing power-ups[1]) by rolling into a ball, and collects rings as a form of health. Sonic can also perform a "spin dash" and a "super peel-out", both of which increase his speed.[2] The game has seven levels; each is split into three zones, the third of which ends in a boss fight against Robotnik. Players start with three lives, which are lost when they suffer any type of damage without rings in their possession; losing all lives results in a game over.[3][4]
Sonic CD is differentiated from other Sonic games through its time travel game mechanic, which allows players to access different versions of rounds set in the past, present, and future. The music changes within the different time zones, as remixes of the present music.[5] Sonic starts the first two zones in the present. The third zone is always set in the future, its timeline dependent upon whether the player destroyed both transporters.[1] He travels through time by hitting signs labelled "past" or "future", maintaining his speed afterward.[6] By default, future stages are neglected and littered with machinery after Robotnik has conquered the Little Planet, appropriately named "bad futures."[6] Players are encouraged to convert each zone into a "good future", with bright colors, thriving nature, and few enemies.[6] To achieve a good future in each zone, players must travel to the past and destroy a hidden transporter where enemy robots spawn. Achieving a good future in every zone unlocks the game's best ending.[2][6]
By finishing a level with more than 50 rings, Sonic can access a special stage, in which he must destroy six UFOs in a pseudo-3D environment within a time limit.[1][5] Time is reduced swiftly if the player runs through water, though a special UFO that appears when time is running out grants extra time if destroyed. If the player destroys all the UFOs before the time runs out, they earn a Time Stone.[4] Collecting all seven Time Stones automatically creates a good future in every zone, unlocking the best ending.[2] The game also features a time attack mode, where players can replay completed levels for the fastest time possible; a "D.A. Garden", where players can listen to the music of completed zones; and a "Visual Mode", where players can view the opening and closing animations.[7] The game also includes a save feature, which uses the back-up memory of the Sega CD.[4]: 20
Sometime after his first adventure, Sonic CD opens with Sonic rushing to Never Lake, where an extraterrestrial body, Little Planet, appears in the last month of every year. His nemesis, Dr. Robotnik, has chained the planet to a mountain and begun transforming it into a giant fortress with his robot army. To execute his plan, Robotnik uses the Time Stones, seven diamonds which control the flow of time, hidden in the different zones. Sonic ventures into the planet, followed by the besotted Amy Rose, his self-proclaimed girlfriend.[lower-alpha 2] Robotnik dispatches his newest invention, Metal Sonic, to kidnap Amy at Collision Chaos, luring Sonic into danger.
After outrunning Metal Sonic in Stardust Speedway and saving Amy, Sonic fights and defeats Robotnik in his lair, Metallic Madness. Two endings exist, depending on whether or not the player collected the Time Stones or achieved a good future in each level. In the good ending, Little Planet thanks Sonic with a shower of stars and leaves Never Lake; in the bad ending, Little Planet still leaves, but Robotnik uses the Time Stones to bring it back and the player is urged to replay the game to achieve the good ending.
The original Sonic the Hedgehog (1991) was developed by Sonic Team at Sega. It was a major commercial success and positioned Sega as Nintendo's main rival in the console market.[8] The lead programmer, Yuji Naka, dissatisfied with Sega of Japan's rigid corporate policies, moved with several members of Sonic Team to the United States to develop Sonic the Hedgehog 2 with Sega Technical Institute (STI).[9][10] Meanwhile, Sega planned to release the Sega CD add-on for its Genesis, and wanted a Sonic game that would demonstrate its more advanced features. Naoto Ohshima, the designer of Sonic, was Sonic CD's director; the remainder of the team comprised Sega staff who had developed The Revenge of Shinobi, Golden Axe II, and Streets of Rage. The team built Sonic CD using the original Sonic the Hedgehog code as a base.[11]
Sonic CD was conceived as an enhanced port of Sonic the Hedgehog for the Sega CD, but it gradually developed into a separate project.[11] It was titled CD Sonic the Hedgehog first[12] before being renamed Sonic CD.[13] Ohshima does not consider Sonic CD a sequel to Sonic the Hedgehog or Sonic 2, although the artist Yasushi Yamaguchi said its story may be set between the two.[14]
Sonic the Hedgehog had a balance on speed and platforming; STI built on the speed with Sonic 2's more focused level designs. However, Ohshima's team sought to focus on the platforming and exploration aspects.[11] Ohshima said, "our ideas were to make the world and setting larger, and to add more replayability, so it would be something you could enjoy playing for a long time".[14] According to artist Kazuyuki Hoshino, because it was a Sega CD game, the team wanted Sonic CD to stand out compared to previous Sonic games. Visually, the game was designed to resemble CG imagery; the Sonic sprite on the title screen was based on a Sonic figurine by Taku Makino that the team photographed and scanned.[14]
Sonic CD marks the debuts of Amy Rose and Metal Sonic, both designed by Hoshino. Although Hoshino created Amy's in-game graphics, many staff members contributed ideas to her design. Her headband and trainer shoes reflected Ohshima's tastes while her mannerisms reflected the traits Hoshino looked for in women at the time. Hoshino designed Metal Sonic in response to Ohshima wanting a strong rival for Sonic. Hoshino had a clear image of Metal Sonic in his mind from the moment he was briefed, and his design emerged after only a few sketches. The character graphics were created using Sega's proprietary graphics system for the Genesis, the "Sega Digitizer MK-III", featuring a bitmap and animation editor. The team mostly used Macintosh IIcis. Graphics data was stored on 3.5-inch floppy disks, which were handed to the programmer to work into the game.[15] Though Naka was not directly involved with Sonic CD, he exchanged design ideas with Ohshima.[16]
Ohshima cited the film Back to the Future (1985) as an influence on the time travel.[16] The developers designed four variants of each stage (one for each time period).[17] Ohshima hoped for the time period to change instantly with a "sonic boom" effect, but the programmers argued this was impossible and produced a loading sequence instead.[16] Sega did not pressure the team developing Sonic CD as much as the one developing Sonic 2. Ohshima felt this was because Sonic CD is not a numbered sequel; he considered it a recreation of the original game.[16] The total game data of Sonic CD is 21 megabytes (MB), compared to Sonic 2's 1 MB.[11] The game includes animated cutscenes produced by Studio Junio; the team used a format that provided uncompressed imagery to the video display processor, which allowed for superior results in contrast to the Cinepak compression used for other Sega CD games.[11] The special stages feature Mode 7-like background plane manipulation effects.[18] An underground dungeon stage was cut early in development as it did not fit the Sonic gameplay.[19]
The original soundtrack was composed by Naofumi Hataya and Masafumi Ogata, who had worked together on the 8-bit version of Sonic the Hedgehog 2.[citation needed] It features two songs, "Sonic — You Can Do Anything" (often referred to as "Toot Toot Sonic Warrior"),[20] composed by Ogata and originally written for Sonic the Hedgehog 2, and "Cosmic Eternity — Believe in Yourself", composed by Hataya. Both are sung by Keiko Utoku.[21] Hataya and Ogata's initial demo songs were rejected by director Naoto Ohshima, who insisted on a more bold, experimental sound that matched his vision for Sonic CD. This led to the composers crafting the game's music around club and house music, inspired by the scene's increasing popularity in Japan, and how Sonic's image was being used in the UK at the time.[22] The vocal theme, "Cosmic Eternity", was the first track approved by Ohshima, becoming the foundation for the rest of the score.[23] Even after approving their concept for the game, Ohshima continued to work closely with the composers to ensure each track perfectly matched his vision for the game, requesting multiple revisions. In keeping with the time-warp theme, the Past tracks were composed using more dated, sample-based PCM audio rather than fully CD-quality audio, giving them a "primitive, prehistoric sound".[22] The composers drew inspiration from house and techno acts including C+C Music Factory, Frankie Knuckles and the KLF.[24] The team also made heavy use of popular sample discs commonly used by house musicians, such as "Zero-G Datafiles 2".[25]
Sega of America delayed the North American release of Sonic CD for two months to have a new soundtrack written and produced by Spencer Nilsen and David Young of Sega Multimedia Studio.[26] Some tracks were written and produced by the keyboardist Mark "Sterling" Crew[27][28][better source needed] and feature the percussionist Armando Peraza, both of whom had worked with Santana.[29] According to Nilsen, Sega's American marketing division wanted to replace the Japanese soundtrack with one "more musically rich and complex", and with a new theme song they could use to promote it.[30] This new soundtrack was produced without the involvement or approval of the game's staff in Japan.[31] "Sonic — You Can Do Anything" and "Cosmic Eternity — Believe in Yourself" were replaced with "Sonic Boom", composed by Nilsen and performed by the female vocal group Pastiche.[30][32] The tracks in the "Past" stages could not be replaced as they were sequenced PCM audio tracks rather than streamed Mixed Mode CD audio.[33][failed verification] Nilsen dismissed critics of his replacement soundtrack as "not very objective", but thought the "controversy" over the two soundtracks was "blown out of proportion".[34]
Sonic the Hedgehog CD Original Soundtrack 20th Anniversary Edition was eventually released on 23 November 2011, consisting of the complete original soundtrack for the game, with select bonus tracks based on the US score.[35] A remix album, titled Sonic The Hedgehog - REMIX, would be released in Japan in late 1994, consisting of arranged versions of select tracks from the game, also composed by Hataya and Ogata.[36] In the United States, the album Sonic The Hedgehog Boom was released in February 1994, consisting of extended versions of most of the game's American soundtrack, as well as arrangements based on Sonic Spinball.[37] An unofficial four-CD tribute album, Temporal Duality: A Sonic CD ReMix Album, was released by OverClocked ReMix in 2013, made up of 45 arrangements based on both the original and North American Sonic CD soundtracks.[38]
Sonic CD was released in Japan on September 23, 1993[39] and in Europe a few weeks later in October.[2] After being delayed for the new soundtrack, it was released in North America in November 23, 1993 alongside Sonic Chaos and Sonic Spinball as part of Sega of America's "Sonic Three on One Day" release strategy.[40][41] Sonic CD was the flagship game for Sega CD and its only Sonic game.[42] An enhanced version of the original Sonic the Hedgehog and a Sonic-themed port of Popful Mail were canceled.[43][44]
Two versions of Sonic CD were released for Windows: one in 1995 for Pentium processors, and another in 1996 for DirectX.[11] The Pentium version was only bundled with new computers and never sold in stores; Sega worked with Intel to make the game work properly.[11] The DirectX version was released under the Sega PC label,[45] and it was released in North America on July 8[46] and in Japan on August 9.[45] This version is mostly identical to the original release,[47] but loading screens were added[11] and it is only compatible with older versions of Windows.[48] Both Windows versions use the North American soundtrack.[11]
The 1996 Windows version was ported to the GameCube and PlayStation 2 in August 2005 for Sonic Gems Collection.[11][49] This port uses the original soundtrack in Japan and the North American soundtrack elsewhere.[50][32] The ports introduced some graphical problems, such as a blurry anti-flicker presentation,[11] but the opening animation is presented in a higher quality fullscreen view.[51]
In 2009, independent programmer Christian Whitehead produced a proof-of-concept video of a remastered version of the game, using his Retro Engine, running on iOS.[52][53] Sega released this version in December 2011 for Android, iOS, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360, and later in January 2012 for Windows via Steam with assistance from BlitWorks in the PC and console ports.[54] The remaster features enhancements such as widescreen graphics, fine-tuned collision detection to make time traveling more consistent, refined visuals and frame rate for Special Stages, the option for spin dash physics from Sonic the Hedgehog 2, both the Japanese and North American soundtracks, the ability to unlock Tails as a playable character, and achievement and trophy support.[55][56][57][58] Whitehead designed two original stages, but they were excluded as Sega wanted to keep the game faithful to the original release.[59] The remaster was not released on the Wii as it exceeded the WiiWare download size.[60] It was included in the 2022 compilation Sonic Origins,[61] which removed voice lines for Sonic and Amy.[62] Amy herself and Knuckles also became selectable characters for the game in a later update to Origins.[63]
Publication | Score |
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Computer and Video Games | 85%[2] |
Electronic Gaming Monthly | 34/40[64][lower-alpha 3] |
GameFan | 400/400[65] |
GamePro | 5/5[66] |
Electronic Games | 92%[1] |
Entertainment Weekly | A−[67] |
Sega Force Mega | 85%[68] |
Sega Magazine | 87%[3] |
Sega Pro | 90%[5] |
Publication | Award |
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Electronic Gaming Monthly | Best Sega CD Game of 1993[69] |
GamePro | Best CD Game of 1993[70] |
The Sega CD version sold more than 1.5 million copies, making it the system's best-seller.[71][72] In the United Kingdom, it was the top-selling Mega CD game in December 1993.[73]
The game received critical acclaim.[1][5][69] The presentation, visuals, and audio were praised. Computer and Video Games wrote that, although Sonic CD did not use the Sega CD's capabilities to its fullest, the game's graphics and sound were still excellent, calling the music "from the likes of 2Unlimited and Bizarre Inc".[2] Electronic Games said that the game looked similar to older games and used the Sega CD's special features minimally, but this did not detract from the quality. The music was singled out as making Sonic CD "stand above the crowd"; the reviewer wrote that it helped add richness to the game.[1] The reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly (EGM) praised the game's animated cinematics and sound, but noted frame rate drops during special stages.[64] Retrospective opinions of the presentation have also been positive. IGN praised its vibrant colors and felt the game looked nice,[74] and GamesRadar thought its music stood the test of time, writing: "What must've dated very quickly in the 1990s is somehow totally fresh today".[18]
Critics were divided over the change of soundtrack in the North American versions. GameFan, which had given the Japanese version of Sonic CD a score of 100%, lambasted the change.[75][76] GameFan editor Dave Halverson called the change "an atrocity that remains the biggest injustice in localization history".[77] The reviewer for GamesRadar said he shut his GameCube off in disgust when he realized Sonic Gems Collection used the American soundtrack.[18] In a 2008 interview, Nilsen said "I think critics were looking for a way to bash the game... it was like we replaced the music for Star Wars after the movie had been out for a while."[30]
The gameplay was also widely praised. EGM admired the diverse levels and felt the time travel added depth.[64] Electronic Games wrote that Sonic CD played as well as previous Sonic games, and that the time travel—coupled with large levels rich with secrets and Super Mario Kart-like special stages—added replayability.[1] Sega Pro also noted the expanded environments and the replay value travel added by the time travel, writing that "the more you play Sonic CD the better it gets", but felt the game was too easy.[5] In its debut issue, Sega Magazine said Sonic CD was "potentially a classic".[3] GameSpot singled out the "interesting level design and the time-travelling gameplay" as a major selling point, saying it provided a unique take on the classic Sonic formula.[6]
Critics wrote that Sonic CD was one of the best Sega CD games. Electronic Games called it a must-have,[1] and Sega Pro said it was "brilliant", imaginative and worth more than its price.[5] Destructoid described it as "a hallmark of excellence", creative, strange, and exciting, and said that "to miss Sonic CD would be to miss some of the franchise's best".[78]
Reception to later versions of Sonic CD varied. GameSpot considered the 1996 Windows version inferior, criticizing its technical performance and "tedious and monotonous" gameplay. The reviewer wrote that "those who have played Sonic on a Sega game system will find nothing new here" and that it was not worth its $50 price.[47] Reviews of the version in Sonic Gems Collection were favorable. IGN remembered Sonic CD as one of the best things about the Sega CD and called it a standout for the compilation, and a major selling point.[50] Eurogamer wrote: "Rejoice for Sonic CD... Just don't rejoice for anything else [in Sonic Gems Collection], because it's mostly rubbish."[79] According to Metacritic, the 2011 console version received "generally favorable reviews",[80][81] while the iOS version received "universal acclaim".[82] Sonic CD is frequently named among the best Sonic games and platform games.[83][84][85][86][87] In 1997, EGM named it the 17th best console game of all time, citing the bonus levels and animated intro.[88]
The story of Sonic CD was adapted in the twenty-fifth issue of Archie Comics' Sonic the Hedgehog comic book series. The adaptation featured some changes to the story, such as Tails being an important character and Metal Sonic having the ability to talk.[89] British publisher Fleetway Publications published their own adaptation in Sonic the Comic.[90] The final issue of Archie's comic, #290 (December 2016), also featured a retelling of the game's story.[91]
Two characters introduced in Sonic CD, Amy Rose and Metal Sonic, became recurring characters in the Sonic series. Metal Sonic appeared as an antagonist in Knuckles' Chaotix (1995), the Sonic the Hedgehog anime film (1996),[92] Sonic Heroes (2003),[93] Sonic the Hedgehog 4: Episode II (2012)[94] and Sonic Mania (2017). Amy Rose most notably appears in Sonic Adventure.[95] The Sonic CD animated sequences were included as bonuses in the compilation Sonic Jam (1997), and "Sonic Boom" was used as one of Sonic's themes in Super Smash Bros. Brawl (2008).[30][96]
In 2011, for the Sonic franchise's 20th anniversary, Sega released Sonic Generations, which includes remakes of various Sonic stages. Both versions feature a re-imagined version of the boss battle against Metal Sonic.[97] Sonic Mania, produced for the series' twenty-fifth anniversary, features updated versions of Sonic CD's Stardust Speedway and Metallic Madness levels, including a boss battle against Metal Sonic.[98][99][100]
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