Philosoma

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Philosoma
256px
Developer(s) Epics (G-Artists)
Publisher(s) Sony Computer Entertainment
Composer(s) Kow Otani
Platforms PlayStation, PlayStation Network
Release date(s) PlayStation
        PlayStation Network
          Genre(s) 2-D/3-D Shooter
          Mode(s) Single-player
          This article is about the video game. For the spiny lobster larva, see Phyllosoma.

          Philosoma (フィロソマ?) is a video game for the Sony PlayStation, released in 1995 and published by Sony Computer Entertainment America.

          Story

          A recently colonized alien planet named Planet 220 reports a devastating attack by an unknown force and requires assistance. Alpha and Bravo teams are called in, but after enemy contact is made, the team fails to respond. The player assumes the roles of D3, a rookie pilot, as well as his commander and Charlie squadron Wing Man Nicolard Michau. Each are piloting the latest space fighter ships, the F/A-37 Strega, in an attempt to neutralize the unknown threat. However, a horrible secret hidden in the battle awaits them.

          Gameplay

          Philosoma plays like many scrolling shooters with the noticeable difference of its multiple perspectives. The camera switches several times during various levels from a vertical/top-down perspective to a rail shooter perspective (which is often reversed), to a horizontal scrolling perspective and an isometric scrolling perspective. The player ships have four weapons that can be upgraded thrice as well as side-arms consisting of homing missiles and rockets.

          Development

          Philosoma was one of the first games announced for the PlayStation. It suffered a prolonged development cycle with its release date being pushed back multiple times, before finally appearing in Japan at the end of June 1995.[3]

          Reception

          On release, Famicom Tsūshin scored the PlayStation version of the game a 27 out of 40.[4] Scary Larry of GamePro criticized the primitive gameplay, saying that "Philosoma tries hard to be a next-gen shooter, but in gameplay it barely surpasses Novastorm." He further remarked that while the FMVs are impressive, the graphics which are most important to the shooter experience - the backgrounds, explosions, and enemies - are all dull. He nonetheless gave the game a mild recommendation for shooter fans.[5] Rich Leadbetter of Maximum made all the same remarks, calling the FMVs impressive but the gameplay visuals "dull", and saying that the "gameplay [harks] back to an archaic age". He scored it two out of five stars and concluded that even the retro release Gradius Deluxe Pack is a far better purchase.[6] Philosoma was awarded Best Shooter of 1995 by Electronic Gaming Monthly.[7]

          Sequel

          In 2001, a sequel was released in Japan only for the PlayStation 2 called Phase Paradox.[8] However, it was only a sequel in terms of it being a continuation of the storyline from Philosoma; the game was in the survival horror genre instead of a shooter genre.

          References

          1. 1.0 1.1 http://www.gamefaqs.com/ps/572514-philosoma
          2. Philosoma at amazon.ca
          3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
          4. NEW GAMES CROSS REVIEW: PHILOSOMA. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.346. Pg.34. 4 August 1995.
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