

This combined with a surprising amount of instant death hazards make this the hardest Shantae of them all, and it’s not a surprise considering the old school feeling in general.


Thankfully, your dance move is mapped to a pretty reasonable X button, rather than the select of the original GBC, which would have been very awkward to do on the switch.ĭuring your explorations, you’ll notice a day and night cycle taking place, and not unlike Castlevania II, the night makes enemies a lot tougher and more aggressive, which can make already dangerous enemies even harder to deal with and take out.

Considering how NSO NES titles manage to retain the proper A/B style and most ports let you freely remap to your liking, it’s pretty irritating that there’s just no way to edit the controls at all in-game. Oddly enough though, despite the game boy using the classic A and B style for jumping and attacking, this port uses a backwards style that focuses on mapping attack to Y and jump to B, with Attack also being A: there’s no in-game way to change it to the proper method, which is pretty silly, though thankfully you can at least remap via the system settings if this bugs you as much as it did for me. The game plays pretty typically, with a jump and attack button. Once you pick your preferred version of the game (Each one with their own batch of save states and save files), you begin the adventure, and after an initial bit in Scuttle Town, you’re off into the main world, where you have to find four dungeons in order to stop Risky from using the Steam Engine. Shantae is a metroidvania adventure game, not unlike the other entries in the franchise, with this game starting the titular franchise with a lot of aspects. The GBA colors really shine and is arguably the only way to play the game in this compilation, since the GBC version doesn’t really other much advantages by itself. Seriously! Throughout the review you’ll spot images I took myself from this GBA mode, and they combined with the pristine pixel scaling make Shantae look absolutely outstanding, to the point I argue it even outshines other GB ports to Switch in that regard. But with this port including both GBC and GBA versions, that means the GBA mode’s unique bright display is reproduced pretty faithfully, and in this mode, I find Shantae to look the best it has ever been. You see, on the 3DS VC, you couldn’t do the GBA bonuses whatsoever since it was emulated in GBC style. When it comes to the actual game itself, Shantae still holds up super well, with this release maintaining the high quality animation frames and effects to outstanding accuracy: while the 3DS VC version did a super good job in that aspect too, I can’t help but feel it somehow pops a bit more in this emulation, especially when regards to the GBA version on offer here. The only gripe I have with these options is the lack of a border, since I feel it would have been pretty neat to have a GBC border of sorts surrounding the game, or at least a frame akin to Super Game Boy.
#Shantae gba code tv#
When it comes to the actual emulations themselves, both modes look outstanding, with no blur filters in sight: The pixels in both modes look excellent and all three display options do a great job of showing off the game: from a 4:3 option for TV play, an LCD option that does a decent job of emulating the GBC screen, to a pixel perfect option for handheld play! It’s a pretty basic menu, but I was pleasantly surprised to see the concept art included at all! In this menu, you have only a few options to choose from, which include booting up either the GBC version or the GBA enhanced edition, and going to an “extras” gallery that leads to a pretty neat selection of concept sketches and original artwork from the 2002 GBC release. In this port of the rare GBC platforming gem, you take control of Shantae in her first adventure, to save Sequin Land from Risky Boots after she sets her sights on a dangerous Steam Engine!īeing an emulated port of the original GBC game, rather than being a remaster, remake or part of a collection, this version of Shantae runs in a new emulator created by Limited Run Games, contained in a fancy intro menu that reminds me a lot of the Digital Eclipse compilations.
#Shantae gba code code#
Thanks to Wayforward for the review code Title: Shantae
