Somer Assault

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Somer Assault
Somer Assault.png
Developer Atlus
Publisher Atlus
Producer Hideyuki Yokoyama
Designers Mayodon Mania
Kazuma Kaneko
Programmer Tsuyoshi Kunieda (Tuohi)
Artists Yoshimi Haishita
Kōji Takino
Composers Hidehito Aoki
Katsuyuki Inose
Platform TurboGrafx-16
Release1991
Genre Action game
Mode Single-player

Somer Assault, known as Mesopotamia [a] in Japan, is a side-scrolling action game developed and published by Atlus in 1991 for the TurboGrafx-16. It features an unnamed pink Slinky object/creature as the protagonist, which can fire bullets from its sides, jump, and slink along walls in its quest to stop an evil sorceress. The title is a play on the word somersault, as the Slinky somersaults around the stage while assaulting enemies.

Contents

Gameplay

The Slinky is able to move along the floor, walls, and the ceiling by slinking along them; it can also make a short jump to move between walls and platforms to slink to a different section of each stage. The Slinky is also equipped with a machine gun that fires from both sides of it to take out the myriad of enemies swarming in each stage. The player is given several hit points which can be increased with power-ups, several lives should the player die, and unlimited continues. A time limit is given for each level, and the goal is to reach the boss of the stage and defeat it before time expires.

Players are asked to enter their date of birth at the start of the game. This causes one boss to fire power-ups as gifts rather than damaging shots (for example, entering a birthday of April 27 will cause the Taurus boss to fire power-ups at the Slinky rather than damaging shots).

Plot

The story (existing in the export version only) is presented in a short prologue sequence at the game's start. "In a time and world not of our own", the evil Sorceress uses her dark powers to summon twelve powerful minions, each of them representing one Zodiac sign, and sends them to conquer the world. The Slinky has to battle through 12 stages of enemies, destroying each Zodiac boss along the way, in order to reach the Sorceress herself and put an end to her plot.

On the final stage, the player must defeat all of the bosses in succession before facing the Sorceress. After she is downed, her body explodes and a battle commences against three enemies resembling the Slinky and called "The Mimickers". When they are destroyed, "The Creator" appears as the real end boss.

Reception

Somer Assault garnered mixed reviews from critics. [3] [4] [7] [10]

The game's player character was ranked #9 in the GameSpy's "Top Ten Lame Lead Characters" list by Kevin "Fragmaster" Bowen. [11]

Notes

  1. Japanese: メソポタミア

References

  1. Knight, Kyle (1998). "Somer Assault - Review". AllGame . All Media Network. Archived from the original on 2014-11-16. Retrieved 2025-11-13.
  2. Harris, Steve; Semrad, Ed; Alessi, Martin; Sushi-X (February 1993). "Review Crew: Somer Assault". Electronic Gaming Monthly . Vol. 6, no. 2. Sendai Publishing. p. 26.
  3. 1 2 "New Games Cross Review: メソポタミア". Famitsu (in Japanese). No. 147. ASCII Corporation. October 11, 1991. p. 38.
  4. 1 2 "発売直前 Review: メソポタミア". Gekkan PC Engine  [ ja ] (in Japanese). Vol. 3, no. 11. Shogakukan. November 1991. p. 146.
  5. Demoly, Jean-Marc; Huyghues-Lacour, Alain (December 1991). "NEC | Tests: Mesopotamia". Joypad  [ fr ] (in French). No. 3. Challenge SARL. pp. 104–106.
  6. Demoly, Jean-Marc (December 1991). "Consoles News: Mesopotamia (PC Engine)". Joystick (in French). No. 22. Sipress. p. 146.
  7. 1 2 "新作ソフトお毒味チャート: メソポタミア". Marukatsu PC Engine  [ ja ] (in Japanese). Vol. 3, no. 11. Kadokawa Shoten. November 1991. p. 134.
  8. Mandel, Josh (January 1993). "Video-Game Reviews: Somer Assault". VideoGames & Computer Entertainment . No. 48. Larry Flynt Publications. p. 64.
  9. Reischmann, Robert (March 1993). "Turbo Duo: Somer Assault". Play Time  [ de ] (in German). No. 21. Computec. p. 119.
  10. Andromeda (January 1993). "TurboChip ProReview: Somer Assault". GamePro . No. 42. IDG. p. 152.
  11. "GameSpy.com - Top 10". 2011-06-03. Archived from the original on June 3, 2011. Retrieved 2014-06-19.