| Sonic Crackers | |
|---|---|
Sonic Crackers title screen |
|
| Developer(s) | Sonic Team |
| Publisher(s) | Sega |
| Composer(s) | Tatsuya Kousaki |
| Series | Sonic Series |
| Platform(s) | Sega Mega Drive/Genesis |
| Release date(s) | Proof-of-concept (ROM dump states that it was released on 1 April 1994.) |
| Genre(s) | Platform game |
| Mode(s) | Single player, multiplayer (to a limited extent) |
| Media | 1MB ROM dump (2MB dump from dev cart with TMNT prototype data in the upper 1MB also exists) |
| Input methods | Control pad |
Sonic Crackers, also known by the name in the ROM header, Sonic Studium, is an early Sonic the Hedgehog prototype game for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis. It is believed to have been an engine test, containing essentially multiple different game engines, swapped out in realtime using code written into RAM. The concepts, engine and various other materials in the prototype was subsequently implemented in the Sega 32X game Knuckles' Chaotix. Sonic Crackers was not a commercial release but is widely distributed on the Internet.
Gameplay
The game has Sonic and
The ROM has two "adventure" levels, one of which appears multiple times with a different palette each time, and two "field" levels. One is highly reminiscent of the Techno Tower Zone level in Knuckles' Chaotix, the objective being to make it to the top of the screen; if this is done or three full minutes elapses on the clock, the Sonic 1 "game over" music plays and the player is brought to the first field level, featuring a clouded background and a waterfall.
The "field" levels are only half-complete; there is no collision set, and Sonic can walk anywhere on the field with immunity. If the player pauses and hits a button, the game goes to a carnival-like level reminiscent of Chaotix' Speed Slider Zone that goes around in an infinite loop. After one minute has elapsed, the circus level ends and another "field" level begins. After the player pauses and hits another button, he or she is brought back to the Techno Tower Zone level with a different palette, four in all.
External links
- Sonic Retro's "Sonic Crackers" Page
- Sonicology's Sonic Crackers Page
- Sonic Research Zone's Sonic Crackers Page
- Sonic Crackers section on the Sonic Cult
References
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




