Flying Shark

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Flying Shark
256px
North American arcade flyer of Sky Shark.
Developer(s) Toaplan
Banana Development
Catalyst Coders
Firebird
Graftgold
Images software
kaneko
Software Creations
Publisher(s)
              Composer(s) Tatsuya Uemura
              Platforms
              Release date(s)
              March 1987
              • Arcade
                  Commodore 64
                    ZX Spectrum
                      Amiga
                        Amstrad CPC
                          Atari ST
                            Nintendo Entertainment System
                              MS-DOS
                                PC
                                  X68000
                                    FM Towns
                                    Genre(s) Scrolling shooter
                                    Mode(s) Up to 2 players, alternating turns
                                    Cabinet Upright
                                    Display Vertical, Raster, standard resolution

                                    Flying Shark (飛翔鮫 Hishōzame?), released in North America as Sky Shark, is a 1987 vertical scrolling shooter arcade game developed by Toaplan and published by Taito in Japan, Electrocoin in the United Kingdom, Model Racing in Italy, and Romstar in North America.

                                    In 1989, the game received a sequel titled Zame! Zame! Zame!.

                                    Gameplay

                                    File:Flying Shark.png
                                    Screenshot of the arcade version.

                                    Piloting a biplane, the player takes out enemy land, air, and naval craft across various environments. Certain waves of enemy airplanes produce bonuses when shot down, such as powerups, point bonuses, and extra lives. Each stage begins and ends at a runway, and every time the player lands at a runway beyond the first takeoff, the amount of bombs multiply 3,000 points to the player's total score. The player gets 3 bombs at the start of each stage (or death). The game has five stages and then it loops from stage two indefinitely.

                                    Ports

                                    File:Flying Shark Cover.jpg
                                    Front cover of the Amstrad CPC version.

                                    This game was converted to the Amiga, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, X68000, FM Towns, and Nintendo Entertainment System. The NES version of the game was Tim Follin's first composed soundtrack on the Nintendo Entertainment System.

                                    Much of the ports were only released in Europe or North America, while few were released in Japan. Unlike this game, this game's sequel contains less home ports than this game does.

                                    References

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                                    External links