Outro: Lost Vikings (SNES)

Channel:
Subscribers:
301
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omtawPIAFiA



Game:
Duration: 6:57
8,427 views
21


The Lost Vikings is a side-scrolling puzzle/platform video game series which was developed by Blizzard Entertainment (then known as "Silicon & Synapse"). The first game, The Lost Vikings, was released in 1992 by publisher Interplay Entertainment. The sequel, The Lost Vikings II, was developed by Blizzard and released in 1994 by Interplay for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. A 32-bit enhanced port of The Lost Vikings II was developed for the Sega Saturn, PlayStation and PC, known in the United States as Norse By Norsewest: Return of the Lost Vikings. It was released by Interplay in 1996, featuring a new super-deformed style for the characters (the SNES version had kept the original one) and voiced dialogue samples. However, this time Blizzard only worked in the development of the original SNES version, and was not involved in the creation of the 32-bit ports. Instead, these were handled by Beam Software.

The main characters in both games are three Vikings, Erik the Swift, Baleog the Fierce, and Olaf the Stout. The goal is to guide all Vikings safely through each level. The game's originality is due to the fact that the player controls three different characters (although only one at any given time), and must make use of their individual abilities and their combinations to solve puzzles and progress.

The games' music was composed by Charles Deenen.

In the game, the three Vikings get kidnapped by Tomator, an extraterrestrial emperor of the Croutonian empire, for an inter-galactic zoo and become lost in various periods of time. The purpose of the game is to control the three characters (who all have separate abilities) in order to solve puzzles to escape and get back home.

All three Vikings have 3 health points which they can lose by getting hurt by enemies or by falling from great heights, and the ability to carry and use items, mainly keys, bombs, and food (which restore health points). None of them can swim.


[edit] Abilities
Erik can run faster than the other two, can jump, and can bash through some walls (and even some enemies) with his helmet.
Baleog can kill enemies with his sword, or from a distance with his bow (and a "life-time supply of arrows"). The bow can also be used to hit switches from a distance.
Olaf can block enemies and their projectiles with his shield, use his shield as a hang glider, or as a stepping stone for Erik to enable him to reach high grounds which is not possible without the shield.

The Lost Vikings was originally released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, then subsequently released for the Amiga, Amiga CD32, MS-DOS, and Sega Mega Drive/Sega Genesis systems the next year; the Mega Drive/Genesis version contains five stages not present in any other version of the game[2]. Blizzard re-released the game for the Game Boy Advance in 2003. The GBA port is identical to the SNES version, but the password feature has been removed and replaced with three save slots, meaning the player cannot replay any level at any time.

The game featured infinite opportunities of retries in case the player were to lose one of the Vikings. Much of the game's appeal came from the humorous inter-level dialogues of the characters. ("If I [head]bash one more wall right now, my head will explode!" "I got dibs on his helmet." "Okay, but I get his boots." "It's great to have such good friends.") Art Director Samwise Didier has stated that the character design for "Erik the Swift" was based on childhood friend Michael Cripps

Platform(s) Amiga, Amiga CD32, Game Boy Advance, MS-DOS, Sega Mega Drive, SNES
Release date(s) 1992, 2003

The Vikings have also shown up from time to time in other Blizzard games. Olaf can be unlocked as a hidden character in the 1993 game Rock 'N' Roll Racing. They most recently appeared as Mobs in Blizzard's MMORPG World of Warcraft in the dungeon Uldaman. One of the quests in Uldaman also requires the player to collect the Shaft of Tsol and Amulet of Gni'Kiv, which spell out "Lost" and "Vik'ing" when read backwards. The shaft and amulet are combined to form the Staff of Prehistoria, which fits the theme of Uldaman and also is an area in The Lost Vikings.

In the Frozen Throne's "Monolith" scenario, the names for the Dark Troll Commando hero are the same as those for the Lost Vikings: Erik the Swift, Baelog the Fierce and Olaf the Stout.

The Lost Vikings II contains several references to Blizzard's other games. In the "Dark Ages" period of time, Erik the Swift accidentally gets teleported to the "Swamps of Sorrow", which is a prominent location in the game Warcraft: Orcs and Humans (this region was later seen as a ladder map in Warcraft III and as a zone in World of Warcraft). Also, one of Tomators monitors shows Rock 'N' Roll Racing playing.

A new unit in Blizzard's upcoming StarCraft II is called the viking, and there is a picture of the unit on their website, subtitled The Lost Vikings







Tags:
64
32x
16
bit
CD
Channel
SEGA
mega
drive
genesis
atari
turbo
graphics
super
snes
nintendo
game
playstation
sony
boy
hardware
vision
2600
emulator
project
PC
console
low
top
best
nice
tech
rom
video
pal
lap
speed
90's
old
school
retro
cool
better
music
chip
how
to
e3
3D
2D
effects
AVGN
review
play
sweet
sound
rocks
rules
comic
let's
kick
gameplay
intro
beat
Lost
vikings
olaf
eric
erik



Other Statistics

The Lost Vikings Statistics For a viewer

Currently, a viewer has 51,508 views for The Lost Vikings across 3 videos. Less than an hour worth of The Lost Vikings videos were uploaded to his channel, or 3.23% of the total watchable video on a viewer's YouTube channel.