One of Treasure's all-time-great beat 'em ups owes its inspiration to a PC sidescroller from a developer mostly known for schoolgirl fighting games

One of Treasure’s all-time-great beat ’em ups owes its inspiration to a PC sidescroller from a developer mostly known for schoolgirl fighting games

Pasokon Retro is our regular look back at the early years of Japanese PC gaming, encompassing everything from specialist ’80s computers to the happy days of Windows XP.

Developer: Fill in Cafe Released: 14/1/1994 (X68000) Japanese PCs: X68000, FM Towns (Image credit: Fill in Cafe)

Before making shmup masterpieces like Radiant Silvergun and Ikaruga, Japanese developer Treasure perfect another style of game: the beat ’em up. Guardian Heroes is one of the best the arcade-born genre’s ever produced, with stages that branch off in all directions leading to several vastly different endings. When crackling spells fill the screen as an undead warrior rains skeletal fury upon the enemies spilling in from all sides, that’s just the game’s idea of an ordinary encounter. The kickflips, dodges, counters, and multi-hit combos used to unleash all this mayhem feel like they must have been inspired by some perfectly crafted one-on-one fighting game.

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