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Blades of SteelBy: The J Man
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Very few hockey games were ever released for the NES, but those that were often had quite a following. Blades of Steel is no hockey simulator by any means, but it's enjoyable for a quick round of arcade-style action. If you're looking for heavy realism, move on. Blades focuses on the action, and as a result simplifies everything. There's no strategic choices of teams' abilities or balancing of players needed. Different teams are just palatte swaps, and every player on the ice is identical in skill and attributes. Management and planning are obsolete, coordination is impossible, complicated control schemes are nonexistent. Basically it's you, on the ice, slapping a puck around.
The game lasts for three, 20 minute periods, but the time at which the clock ticks down is greatly accelerated. A whole game of three periods will usually last about 30 minutes. There is the standard five on five setup, with you switching between your teammates depending on their proximity to the puck. Your active player flashes while the computer controls the rest. Don't rely on them for much beyond moving the puck down the ice. This makes sense however, as any time you would shoot, you would be controlling the player with the puck. The opposing team's AI is not brilliant, but fairly adequate. They're not too great at defense however. Even at the highest difficulty, you can skate right up to the goalie and send one flying past him.
The graphics in the game are fantastic, and fairly detailed for its time. The arena is filled with fans and marked with exit signs and stairs, a giant scoreboard is displayed between goals, and all of the regulation markings are on the ice as they should be. Players themselves are small, but sized properly for the arena. They are made up of only two colors, but always distinguishable from the other team. Sound is a weak point of the game. The same electronic crackle that is used as static on a radio and waves on a beach is used as crowd noise here. Digitized voices are in the game, saying "Blades of Steel" at the title screen, "Face off" as the ref drops the puck, and something incoherent like "break the pass" basically every time you switch players. These voices are muffled, too low in volume to be properly understood, and really shouldn't have been included in the first place. They add nothing to the game except to proudly show that they were able to do it in an age where voice in games was a rarity. The rest of the effects are standard fare and unmemorable, except for the few renditions of classic sports victory tunes each time a team scores. Those are actually quite good.
In fact that sums the game as whole up pretty well. It's the basics of hockey and nothing more. If you're looking for an arcade hockey game, this is one you might well enjoy. If you require something any deeper than that, then you will need to look elsewhere. -reviewed 7/22/01 - game copyright 1988 Konami
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