Dragon Slayer: The Legend of Heroes

Dragon Slayer: The Legend of Heroes[a] is a 1989 role-playing game developed by Nihon Falcom. It is the sixth game in the Dragon Slayer series and the first in The Legend of Heroes franchise.

Dragon Slayer:
The Legend of Heroes
Developer(s)Nihon Falcom
Publisher(s)Nihon Falcom
Hudson Soft (TCD)[5]
Composer(s)Mieko Ishikawa
Masaaki Kawai
SeriesDragon Slayer
The Legend of Heroes
Platform(s)NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-9801, FM Towns, MSX 2, TurboGrafx-CD, Super Famicom, Sharp X68000, Mega Drive, Satellaview, Windows, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, Virtual Console
ReleaseNEC PC-8801
  • JP: December 10, 1989
NEC PC-9801
FM Towns
  • JP: June 8, 1990
MSX
TurboGrafx-CD
  • JP: October 25, 1991
  • NA: December 1992[2]
Super Famicom
Sharp X68000
  • JP: January 8, 1993
Mega Drive
  • JP: September 16, 1994[4]
PC
  • KO: 1996
  • JP: April 25, 1997
PlayStation (I+II bundle)
  • JP: June 25, 1998
Sega Saturn (I+II bundle)
  • JP: September 23, 1998
Genre(s)Role-playing game
Mode(s)Single-player

It was originally released in 1989 for the NEC PC-8801. Within the next few years, it would also be ported to the NEC PC-9801, MSX 2, PC Engine CD-ROM/TurboGrafx-CD, Sharp X68000, Sega Mega Drive, and Super Famicom. A Dragon Slayer: The Legend of Heroes Barcode Battler card set was also released by Epoch Co. in 1992. The PC Engine version was released in the United States for the TurboGrafx-CD and was the only game in the series released in the US until The Legend of Heroes: A Tear of Vermillion, the PlayStation Portable remake.

In 1995, a version of the game was broadcast exclusively for Japanese markets via the Super Famicom's Satellaview subunit under the name BS Dragon Slayer Eiyu Densetsu. In 1998, a remake of The Legend of Heroes was bundled with a remake of Dragon Slayer: The Legend of Heroes II and was released for both the PlayStation and Sega Saturn.

Reception

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The PC Engine version was rated 25.24 out of 30 by PC Engine Fan magazine.[6] Famitsu scored the PC Engine CD-ROM version 29 out of 40 in 1991.[5] They later scored the Super Famicom version 29 out of 40 in 1992,[3] and the Sega Mega Drive version 23 out of 40 in 1994.[4]

In its January 1993 issue, Electronic Games magazine's Electronic Gaming Awards nominated the TurboGrafx-CD version for the 1992 Multimedia Game of the Year award. They wrote it "demonstrates how far multimedia has come" since the same design team's Ys I & II and that this "mammoth quest is meticulously detailed and incorporates highly involved game play".[7]

Notes

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  1. ^ Japanese: ドラゴンスレイヤー 英雄伝説, Hepburn: Doragon Sureiyā Eiyū Densetsu

References

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  1. ^ "ドラゴンスレイヤー 英雄伝説 [MSX] / ファミ通.com". Famitsu.
  2. ^ "Special feature". GamePro. No. 40. November 1992. p. 22.
  3. ^ a b "ドラゴンスレイヤー 英雄伝説 [スーパーファミコン] / ファミ通.com" (in Japanese). famitsu.
  4. ^ a b "ドラゴンスレイヤー 英雄伝説 [メガドライブ] / ファミ通.com" (in Japanese). famitsu.
  5. ^ a b "ドラゴンスレイヤー 英雄伝説 [PCエンジン]". ファミ通.com (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2013-06-27.
  6. ^ "ROLEPLAYING GAME". PC Engine Fan (in Japanese) (PC Engine All Catalog '92: PC Engine Fan Appendix): 33-48 (42-3). August 1992.
  7. ^ "Electronic Gaming Awards". Electronic Games (38): 26–7. January 1993. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
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