Gley Lancer (Sega Megadrive)

Gley Lancer

A side-scrolling sci-fi shooter, Gley Lancer casts you as Lucia, a young pilot in the Space Fleet of starfighters that hijacks the experimental Gley Lancer fighter to go explore the outer borders of known space in search of her missing father. Along the way Lucia will have to shoot down dozens of enemies in standard shooter fashion, while avoiding destruction and collecting power-ups that extend her ship's energy, upgrade weapons and gather screen-clearing bombs.

The Gley Lancer comes equipped with two hovering satellites that can receive weapon upgrades of their own, and can lock their positions at specific angles to increase your firepower and protect the player from enemy attacks. Features only a single-player campaign with two different endings depending on how the final stages are completed (e.g. if Lucia's father is rescued or not).

Gley Lancer Review

By Damo

The Virtual Console certainly isn’t short of 2D shooters. We’ve seen some excellent (and not so excellent) examples of the genre come and go, but most of the games we’ve experienced so far are retro classics and will have been familiar to fans already. Gley Lancer, on the other hand, might not ring any bells with you unless you happen to be a hardcore import collector.

You see, Gley Lancer (the goofy title is due to the fact that the Japanese have difficulty differentiating between “L” and “R”) is one of the most sought after and expensive Megadrive/Genesis shooters, largely due to the fact that it never made it out of Japan. Produced by the same talented chaps behind Gynoug/Wings of Wor and Cho Aniki, the game does away with the unusual organic designs of those two titles and instead presents a purely futuristic visual style. Graphically Gley Lancer is certainly impressive, with a gorgeous anime introduction sequence that wouldn’t look out of place in a Mega CD title, nicely detailed sprites and some interesting parallax scrolling effects, but some of the later levels do have a tendency to feel a little bland.

This is one of those rare shooters that actually offers a wide range of options to the player before they even take off; before you enter the fray you can decide how your ‘option’ pods behave. You can have them fire in the opposite direction to the one you’re moving in, for example. If you favour a more full-frontal attack you can fix them to fire forwards, or if you want to protect your rear, backwards. It seems a little gimmicky to begin with but as invest more time into the game you realize that the different choices directly affect your strategy and exploring the myriad of possibilities available boosts the amount of playtime Gleylancer offers.

Ironically for a game that is held in such high regard, Gley Lancer actually got quite a cool response when it was first released. UK magazine Mean Machines Sega gave it a scolding review, stating that it was dull and generic. While that is almost certainly too harsh an appraisal, it does hold water to a certain degree; Gley Lancer isn’t the most original blaster you’re likely to experience on Sega’s 16-bit console and there are far better examples out there.

As a Virtual Console release the game faces the same problem – games like Soldier Blade, Gate of Thunder and Lords of Thunder are all superior titles and should be investigated immediately; if you’re already done so then Gley Lancer is a worthy download.

4/5

Average reader rating: 4.60 (5 ratings)

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Screenshots

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Gley Lancer (Video Clip)

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1. Damo United Kingdom 13 Mar 2008, 17:06 GMT

People tend to rave about this but there are actually much better shooters available on the Megadrive/Genesis, IMO. I think it's the fact that it never made it out of Japan - not to mention the high price - that lends this game a sense of the epic.

Don't get me wrong, it's very good, but Thunderforce IV pretty much leaves it for dead.

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2. Shiryu Portugal 13 Mar 2008, 21:12 GMT

Cool, you used another one of my YoutTube videos!

Damo, I agree that preety much "ThunderForce IV" is untouchable as long as shooters on the Megadrive go, but I really, REALLY love "Gleylancer". This one and "Eleminate Down" are some of the most obscure schmups that deserve some credit.

I hope the VC helps bringing this and many more to light. You guys are already doing a very good job at 'enlightning' the young people who never had these consoles.

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3. President_Leever Sweden 14 Mar 2008, 00:33 GMT

I agree that it's not as fantastic as some people seem to think, but still among the top 10 shooters on MD. Eliminate Down, Thunder Force 3-4, Gaiares and Battle Mania 2 are all better.

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4. Radretrogamer United States 14 Mar 2008, 21:31 GMT

Love the box art!

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5. Sharecrow United States 15 Mar 2008, 01:51 GMT

I'm definitely intrigued. I think I'll be downloading it if and when it gets released :)

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6. Tony United States 17 Mar 2008, 18:51 GMT

The video of the this game looks intense. Might be worth it

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7. GameGod3008 United Kingdom 14 Apr 2008, 15:21 GMT

I'm not sure on this one. I'll see what the review says when it's released

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8. AlphaNerd01 United States 04 May 2008, 00:20 GMT

YES. Soon it shall be ours!

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9. dossaer Australia 16 May 2008, 02:09 GMT

@ Damo, yeah, but when do we get Thunderforce IV for the VC?

That's what I want to know. :)

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10. FalloutBR Brazil 16 May 2008, 02:26 GMT

I've never played before, so I can't comment on the gameplay, but I'll say one thing, the music is pretty good for Mega Drive game, too bad you can't quite hear the sound effects on the video. The boss battles look interesting also, just as in many Mega Drive games.
Looks promising, I'll give it a try when (if) it arrives to the US VC.

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11. Damo United Kingdom 16 May 2008, 09:13 GMT

dossaer - Good question. Although many people assume Thunderforce to be a Sega franchise thanks to its close connection with Sega hardware, it's actually appeared on the SNES and Playstation too.

Creators Technosoft are no longer with us and I'm not sure who owns the rights to the franchise now. It certainly would be a crying shame if none of the TF games made it to the VC.

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12. DEMON212 United Kingdom 16 May 2008, 13:55 GMT

Mean Machines SEGA... Was that a different countried version of you guys?

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13. Dazza United Kingdom 16 May 2008, 15:32 GMT

Mean Machines magazine only ran for two years (90-92) then it split into Nintendo Magazine System and Mean Machines Sega. It wasn't ever really as good after they split the formats up.

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14. N.A.T.O United Kingdom 16 May 2008, 16:19 GMT

I still cherish my copy of Mean Machines Sega with the streets or rage 2 review. Wicked magazine, bring back Yob. Still amusing to this day.

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