Chase H.Q.: Secret Police

Last updated
Chase H.Q.: Secret Police
Chase HQ Secret Police Cover.webp
Developer(s) Dreams Co. Ltd
ITL Co. Ltd
Publisher(s) Metro3D
Platform(s) Game Boy Color
ReleaseSeptember 13 1999
Genre(s) Vehicular combat
Mode(s) Single-player, Multiplayer

Chase H.Q.: Secret Police is a vehicular combat game for the Game Boy Color developed by Dreams Co. Ltd and ITL Co. Ltd and published by Metro3D in 1999. The game is an installment in the Chase H.Q. series which began with a 1988 arcade video game by Taito.

Contents

Gameplay

Screenshot Secret Police Screenshot.png
Screenshot

Similar to the arcade game Chase H.Q. , Secret Police is a racing game where the player is a police officer tasked with pursuing and apprehending a criminal in a car chase. The game involves vehicular combat as the player can run the criminal off the road, shoot them, or damage their car to defeat them. [1] The game features ten stages in which the objectives differ, for instance, requiring the player to track and trap multiple suspects. [2] Further to the design of the arcade game, Secret Police contains a strategy element in which the player first chooses a number of detectives in a team and places them at various locations on a map to set a course to intercept the suspect. If the detectives cross a course with the suspect, the game enters a chase sequence. [3]

Reception

Reception of Secret Police was mixed. Positive reception was focused upon the innovations made upon the original arcade game. Writing for Total Game Boy, Tom Sargent praised the variety of the gameplay, featuring "two games in one" through its map and chase stages. [6] Frank Provo of GameSpot agreed, finding the strategy elements were "engrossing" and "the key to (the game's) lasting appeal". [5] A negative review for Game Informer conceded that the additions were an "interesting new feature to (the) port of the arcade classic". [4]

Negative reviews of Secret Police focused on the poor execution of the gameplay. Craig Harris of IGN dismissed the game as "flat-out dull", stating the "driving portion is rather boring", critiquing that "the camera shifts over to the side in a tight curve so that you can't see what's two pixels in front of (you)...it's a dirty trick to make the game harder to play." [2] Game Boy Xtreme considered the game to be an "average conversion" of the source material, with "weak visuals". [7] Game Informer critiqued the buggy performance of the game, highlighting the "shoddy" collision, noting "you can often pass right through other cars on the road unscathed". [4]

Related Research Articles

<i>Chase H.Q.</i> 1987 video game

Chase H.Q. is a vehicular combat racing game, originally released as an arcade video game by Taito in 1988. It is sometimes seen as a spiritual successor to Taito's earlier Full Throttle. The player assumes the role of a police officer named Tony Gibson, member of the "Chase Special Investigation Department". Along with his partner, Raymond Broady, he must stop fleeing criminals in high-speed pursuits in a black Porsche 928.

<i>Driver</i> (video game) 1999 action driving video game

Driver is an action driving video game and the first installment in the Driver series. Developed by Reflections Interactive and published by GT Interactive, it was released on the PlayStation on 25 June 1999. The game, inspired by movie car chases, sees players driving around four real-life cities – Miami, San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York – using a variety of vehicles, with the plot focusing on the work of an undercover police officer, John Tanner, who infiltrates a criminal outfit to investigate their operations, only to discover a plot by their boss to assassinate the President of the United States.

<i>Cruisn Exotica</i> 1999 video game

Cruis'n Exotica is a 1999 racing game developed for arcades by Midway Games. The game is a sequel to Cruis'n World and is the third entry in the Cruis'n series.

<i>Sonic Pinball Party</i> 2003 video game

Sonic Pinball Party is a video game released for the Game Boy Advance in 2003. It is a celebration of sorts for Sonic Team featuring many references to its previous games, mostly prominently Sonic the Hedgehog, Nights into Dreams, and Samba De Amigo. There was also a release on a Twin Pack cartridge bundled with Sonic Battle and Sonic Advance respectively in 2005.

<i>Mega Man Xtreme</i> 2000 video game

Mega Man Xtreme is a 2000 video game developed by Capcom for the Game Boy Color handheld console. It is a spin-off title in the Mega Man X series of video games that originated on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. Mega Man Xtreme takes place within the series timeline during the 22nd century, in which a group of "Maverick" androids called the "Shadow Hunters" hack into the world's "Mother Computer" system, destabilize all of the networks, and allow other Mavericks to cause rampant destruction all over the world. The heroic "Maverick Hunter" X is tasked with going into cyberspace to relive his past missions and put a stop to the group's plans.

<i>Star Wars Trilogy: Apprentice of the Force</i> 2004 video game

Star Wars Trilogy: Apprentice of the Force is an action-platformer video game developed and published by Ubisoft. Released on September 22, 2004 for the Game Boy Advance, the game follows Luke Skywalker through the Star Wars original trilogy.

<i>Rogue Trip: Vacation 2012</i> 1998 video game

Rogue Trip: Vacation 2012, also known as Rogue Trip, is a vehicular combat video game developed by SingleTrac and published by GT Interactive for the PlayStation in 1998. The game is set in an apocalyptic fiction alternative history version of the year 2012 where mercenaries fight against each other using vehicles, and various weapons as they pick up tourists, hitchhikers, and passengers paying them fares for bringing them to vacation destinations around the remnants of the destroyed United States, and these mercenaries call themselves "auto mercenaries".

<i>SpyHunter</i> 2001 video game

SpyHunter is a vehicular combat game. It is a remake and sequel of the 1983 arcade game of the same name first released for PlayStation 2 in 2001. It has since been ported to GameCube, Xbox, Game Boy Advance, Microsoft Windows, OS X, and Tapwave Zodiac. In the game, the player drives the G-6155 Interceptor, an advanced, weaponized spy vehicle. Unlike the original's top-down view, the remake is played with a chase camera, similar to a racing game.

<i>Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones</i> (video game) 2002 video game

Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones is a video game based on the film of the same name. The game was first announced by THQ and LucasArts in early February 2002, months prior to the film's release.

<i>Car Battler Joe</i> 2001 video game

Car Battler Joe is a 2001 vehicular combat game developed by Ancient and published by Natsume Inc. for the Game Boy Advance. The game involves using cars to fight opponents in action-styled battles, with role-playing video game game mechanics. It combined vehicular combat game with action role-playing elements in a similar manner to Autoduel from 1985.

<i>Ray Tracers</i> 1997 video game

Ray Tracers is an arcade-style auto racing and combat video game developed by Taito and released in Japan and Europe in 1997 and in North America in 1998 for the PlayStation console. It has been compared to Taito's own Chase H.Q. from 1988.

<i>Star Wars: Flight of the Falcon</i> 2003 video game

Star Wars: Flight of the Falcon is a 3D first-person shooter video game developed by British company Pocket Studios and published by THQ for the Game Boy Advance in 2003. Based on the events of the original Star Wars trilogy of films, the game allows the player to pilot various space ships in the battles against the antagonistic Galactic Empire. The story follows the pilots of the space ship Millennium Falcon, Han Solo and his Wookiee co-pilot Chewbacca, as they help save the galaxy from the Empire's forces.

<i>The Mask of Zorro</i> (video game) 1999 video game

The Mask of Zorro is a 1999 Game Boy Color platform game developed by Saffire and published by Sunsoft, based upon and following the plot of the 1998 movie of the same name.

<i>James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing</i> (GBA video game) 2003 video game

James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing is a third-person shooter video game, developed by Griptonite Games and published by Electronic Arts for the Game Boy Advance (GBA). As MI6 agent James Bond, the player must foil an ex-KGB agent who plans to use nanotechnology for world domination.

<i>The Incredible Hulk</i> (2003 video game) 2003 video game

The Incredible Hulk is a 2003 beat 'em up video game developed by Pocket Studios and published by Universal Interactive for the Game Boy Advance. The game, featuring an isometric perspective, is based on the Marvel Comics superhero Hulk, who must traverse through a series of levels and destroy enemies with an assortment of physical attacks; a multiplayer mode in which players battle against each other is also featured.

<i>XXX</i> (video game) 2002 action video game

XXX is a 2002 action video game developed by Digital Eclipse and published by Activision for the Game Boy Advance. Based on the film of the same name, the narrative follows Xander "xXx" Cage, an underground thrill-seeker who is recruited as a spy to stop the evil Anarchy 99 organization before it unleashes an assault on the Earth. Much of the game is played in a side-scrolling run and gun format, while a few levels feature vehicular combat inspired by Road Rash. The game was developed in approximately two months and received mixed reviews upon release, with critics faulting the gameplay's lack of innovation, simplistic AI, and short length, though the visuals and music were assessed positively.

<i>Trouballs</i> 2001 video game

Trouballs is a 2001 Game Boy Color game developed by Paragon Five and published by Capcom Entertainment, and is a puzzle game similar in design to Tetris and Puyo Puyo.

<i>Cool Bricks</i> 1999 video game

Cool Bricks is a 1999 block breaker game developed by Pukka Games and published by SCi Games. The game is an adaptation of the arcade game Breakout for the Game Boy Color.

<i>F-18 Thunder Strike</i> 2000 video game

F-18 Thunder Strike is a 2000 action game for the Game Boy Color developed by Morning Star Multimedia and published by Majesco Entertainment. The game is a simplified first-person combat flight simulator in which the player operates a F-18 Hornet for the United States Air Force, who have has confirmed reports of renewed hostile activity in the Balkans and order an aerial assault on the region.

<i>NASCAR Challenge</i> 1999 video game

NASCAR Challenge is a 1999 video game for the Game Boy Color, developed by Morning Star Multimedia and published by Hasbro Interactive. The game is a NASCAR-licensed racing video game featuring three tracks from the NASCAR circuit. Upon release, the game received negative reviews, with publications critiquing the game's limited tracks, features, and poor attention to detail.

References

  1. "Chase H.Q. Secret Police". 28 July 1999.
  2. 1 2 3 Harris, Craig (2 October 1999). "Chase H.Q. Secret Police". IGN.
  3. 1 2 Cook, Brad. "Chase H.Q.: Secret Police". Allgame. Archived from the original on 2014-11-14.
  4. 1 2 3 "Chase HQ: Secret Police". GameInformer (80): 84. December 1999.
  5. 1 2 Provo, Frank (17 May 2006). "Chase HQ: Secret Police Review". GameSpot.
  6. 1 2 Sargent, Tom (1999). "Chase HQ: Secret Police". Total Game Boy Color (5): 31.
  7. 1 2 "On the Shelves". Game Boy Xtreme (1): 62. July 2001.