Trauma Center: New Blood | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Atlus [lower-alpha 1] |
Publisher(s) | |
Director(s) | Daisuke Kanada |
Designer(s) | Taku Aoyagi Akira Odagaki Takashi Kato |
Programmer(s) | Takaaki Ikeda |
Artist(s) | Masayuki Doi |
Writer(s) | Shogo Isogai |
Composer(s) | Kenichi Tsuchiya Atsushi Kitajoh |
Series | Trauma Center |
Platform(s) | Wii |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | Simulation, visual novel |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Trauma Center: New Blood [lower-alpha 2] is a simulation video game developed by Atlus for the Wii. The third entry in the Trauma Center series, the game was published in North America in 2007 by Atlus, and in other regions in 2008 by Atlus (Japan) and Nintendo (Europe and Australia). The story follows doctors Markus Vaughn and Valerie Blaylock, each holding a supernatural ability called the Healing Touch, as they face a man-made parasitic virus called Stigma. Gameplay combines surgical simulation with a story told as a visual novel, with operations controlled exclusively using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk.
Development of New Blood began following the completion of Trauma Center: Second Opinion . The North American setting and overall narrative was influenced by the staff of Atlus USA, based on the series' overseas success. Development was supported by Media.Vision. While using many of the systems created for Second Opinion, the staff focused on adding full voice acting and multiplayer. The game met with generally positive reviews; praise was given to its gameplay and cooperative function, but reactions to the story were mixed, and several faulted its high difficulty. It was also described as a commercial success, selling 300,000 copies in North America.
Trauma Center: New Blood is a video game that combines surgical simulation gameplay missions, ranging from story-based to optional challenge missions, with storytelling employing non-interactive visual novel segments using static scenes and voiced dialogue. [2] [3] Players take on the roles of protagonists Markus Vaughn and Valerie Blaylock, surgeons with a mystical ability called the Healing Touch. [4] Each operation tasks players with curing the patient of their ailment within a time limit. [5] Missions can be played on different difficulty settings. [6]
Operations range from treating surface wounds and extraction operations to organ transplants and repairing broken bones, in addition to procedures new to the Trauma Center series such as skin grafts and fixing electronic devices. Several operations pit the protagonists against an artificial disease known as Stigma, with several strains being highly mobile and requiring multiple tools to defeat. [7] Actions during surgery are guided using the Nunchuk. The Wii Remote is used for many actions including stitching up wounds and using the scalpel. Operating tools are selected from a radial options menu using the Nunchuk's control stick. [6] [8] Multiple surgical tools are required for different operations and injuries; players may need to drain blood pools obstructing the operating area, use a surgical laser to treat small tumors or boils, forceps to close wounds and remove foreign objects, and sutures to sew up both wounds and incisions. The player must frequently apply antibiotic gel to treat minor injuries and prevent infection. [4] [8] [9] Patients going into cardiac arrest must be either revived with the defibrillator, or receive heart massages. [6]
The Healing Touch can be activated by drawing a star on the screen with the Wii Remote. [9] The Healing Touch ability of each doctor is different; Markus can stop time for a limited period which can allow the boosting of vitals and the performance of medical procedures without risking a patient's health depleting, and Valerie can stabilise patients and prevent their health from depleting for a limited time while being unable to boost it. [4] In addition to single-player, a local two-person multiplayer option is available, allowing two people to work together during operations with separate pairs of Wii controllers. [6] [7] Each action by the player is graded based upon speed and accuracy, along with the doctor selected and whether co-op was used. An overall ranking is delivered at the end of each mission based on both these factors and hidden modifiers specific to each operation. [4] [6] Players can post their scores on online leaderboards through the Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection. [6] [9]
Set a decade after the events of Trauma Center: Second Opinion , New Blood follows doctors Markus Vaughn and Valerie Blaylock. [9] Initially stationed in Alaska, where Vaughn lives in a self-imposed exile at the local hospital, a visit for surgery by nurse Elena Salazar prompts Markus and Valerie to be recalled to the Concordia Medical Institute in Los Angeles. Markus's mentor Professor Wilkins has been infected with a new parasitic disease he dubs Stigma, and due to their Healing Touch abilities Markus and Valerie are the best candidates for removing it. While the operation is successful, Concordia is attacked by an unknown group and Wilkins kidnapped during the chaos. In the wake of this and further cases of Stigma being diagnosed, Markus and Valerie are drafted into a dedicated unit at the USA branch of Caduceus, a multinational, semi-covert organization dedicated to researching and curing intractable diseases. During their initial stay and work, Stigma is kept a secret from the public, but are forced to reveal it following an incident on a live surgery TV show. Further research into Stigma reveals that it needs a metal called Culurium to survive; the metal is used extensively in medical equipment and pharmaceutical products manufactured by Columba & Cornix, meaning its use has been unwittingly spreading the disease.
Shortly after this, Markus, Valerie and Elena are kidnapped by a criminal group called Parnassus, who have been researching, cultivating, and selling Stigma as a biological weapon in many black markets. One of the group leaders is recognized by Markus as Wilkins. During their captivity, Markus confesses to Valerie and Elena that he accidentally created Stigma during cancer experiments with laboratory mice, and fled to Alaska after Wilkins resisted destroying Stigma to gain fame through its discovery and research. The three escape, and are eventually sent on a mission to the country of Culuruma—the source of Culurium—to combat a Stigma outbreak. Culuruma is rocked by a guerrilla uprising and the Stigma outbreak, which are revealed to be instigated by members associated with the Parnassus group. The current leader is killed as the guerrillas are suppressed, and it is revealed that Stigma is both occurring around the world and evolving past the point where it needs Culurium, sparking a global health crisis. Back in the US, Caduceus and the FBI collaborate on the investigation, though Caduceus's efforts are impeded by the disappearance of a key staff member Cynthia Kasakov.
The groups locate a Parnassus base, and there discover Wilkins, who has been manipulated by the members of the group using an electronic device implanted in his brain. Once the device is deactivated, Wilkins returns to normal, remembering nothing since his initial Stigma operation (though believing his captivity to be a nightmare), and expressing his regret at continuing to research Stigma against Markus's wishes, insisting the project must be terminated. Information at the base reveals the leader of Parnassus is Master Vakhushti, who was known under another name (Ray Kerensky) and to Valerie as Cynthia's boyfriend. Locating Cynthia at another Parnassus base in Central Asia, Markus and Valerie learn that she is being held hostage by Vakhushti using a medical implant on her heart when she tried talking him out of using Stigma. After the device is removed, Cynthia leads them to Vakhushti's main base, where they are forced to remove the final and most powerful Stigma strain from his body. A repentant Vakhushti reveals that Stigma altered his mind when he used it to combat his malign diencephalic syndrome. Following Vakhushti's death, Caduceus procures his Stigma research for analysis to end the global outbreak, and Parnassus's operations wane, while Markus, Valerie and Elena continue their work.
New Blood was primarily developed by the team at Atlus responsible for the previous Trauma Center games, referred to internally as "CaduceTeam" and known for their love for gameplay-focused experiences. [10] [11] [12] Additional work was done by Media.Vision, who designed the settings and background artwork. [1] Nearly all the original staff from Second Opinion returned to develop New Blood, [13] including scenario writer Shogo Isogai, director Daisuke Kanada, artist Masayuki Doi, and programmer Takaaki Ikeda. [14] [10] [15] Taku Aoyagi, Akira Odagaki and Takashi Kato acted as lead designers. [16]
Development of New Blood began shortly after the completion of Second Opinion. The team used player feedback from Second Opinion to inform the new game's design. [13] While New Blood was designed as the continuation of the Trauma Center series, it was also aimed at series newcomers as it had a story separate from Under the Knife and new gameplay functions. [17] The goal of mimicking and improving upon the original gameplay of Trauma Center was carried over into New Blood. [12] As with Second Opinion, Kanada wanted to give the game a similar feel to classic titles like Space Harrier and Gradius . [13] Isogai began collaborating on the scenario with Kanada from an early stage. [15]
With an international release planned from the outset, the team consulted Atlus USA, who had two main suggestions. The first was that there should be both a male and female protagonist, and that the female—in addition to other female characters—should not be in inferior positions of power to their male counterparts. The second was that one of the protagonists should be dark-skinned, and again in an equal position of authority to the other protagonist. Atlus agreed to both of these points, resulting in the protagonists being equal working colleagues and Doi's designs for them reflecting their equality. The characters' names were provided by Atlus USA, with the Japanese staff finding them difficult to transliterate into Japanese. [15] The story and gameplay themes were the battle to save lives and the precious nature of life. [12] Multiplayer was included at the suggestion of Ikeda, based on feedback from Second Opinion and the decision to have two main characters. Ikeda created a working prototype over a few days, with full implementation happening after Kanada's approval. [15] Another new addition was supporting widescreen 16:9 displays, as Second Opinion had only supported 4:3 ratio. [18] [19]
The music for New Blood was composed by Kenichi Tsuchiya and Atsushi Kitajoh. Tsuchiya, whose previous work included the Persona and Growlanser series, had worked on the Trauma Center series since the first game. Kitajoh was a newcomer to Trauma Center, whose previous notable work had been contributions to the soundtrack of Persona 3 FES . [10] Several tracks were scored to reflect the personalities of certain characters. There were also tracks that used remixes of themes used in earlier Trauma Center games. During the music writing process, Kitajoh did several arrangements without consulting Tsuchiya, something he was used to with the general Atlus Sound Team. Tsuchiya remembered the music writing process as stressful but rewarding. [20] The soundtrack was recorded at a studio on Yoyogi. [21]
One of Kanada's wishes for New Blood was to include full voice acting in the game's story, something they could not do for Second Opinion or the original Trauma Center. [22] Casting voice actors began before the character designs had been finalized, and in some cases an actor's performance influenced the design of their character portrait in story scenes. A few voice actors needed to take on multiple roles during a single recording session. A returning voice actor from Second Opinion was Takayuki Kondō, who had provided the voice for Derek Stiles. The Atlus team used their experience from voice recording for Second Opinion when handling recording sessions for New Blood. [23]
New Blood was announced at the 2007 Electronic Entertainment Expo as one of Atlus's upcoming titles for that year. [18] [24] The game was localised into English by Atlus USA. [25] While initially planned for simultaneous release in North America and Japan, [25] the game was released first in North America on November 20, 2007. [26] The English dub was handled by PCP Productions, who had worked with Atlus on the other Trauma Center titles. [27] In Japan, the game was released on January 17, 2008 by Atlus. [28] The game was supplemented in the region by a guidebook in January 2008, [29] and a soundtrack album published by Tye Entertainment in February of the same year. [30] In Europe, the game was published by Nintendo on November 7. [31] It was published in Australia on January 22, 2009. [32]
Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
Metacritic | 77/100 (43 reviews) [33] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
1Up.com | C [34] |
Eurogamer | 8/10 [5] |
Famitsu | 31/40 [35] |
Game Informer | 7.5/10 [36] |
GameSpot | 8/10 [7] |
GameSpy | [37] |
IGN | 8.5/10 [6] 8.1/10 (Australia) [38] |
NGamer | 8.4/10 [39] |
Nintendo World Report | 8.5/10 [40] |
Official Nintendo Magazine | 67% [41] |
PALGN | 8/10 [42] |
Play | 7/10 [43] |
Between its North American release and February 2008, New Blood sold over 250,000 units in the region. [30] During its debut week in Japan, the game reached third place in sales charts. [44] Despite this, it did not appear in Japanese gaming magazine Famitsu 's top 500 best-selling titles for 2008, indicating sales of less than 19,000 units. [45] By June 2009, the game had sold over 300,000 copies in North America. [46] In an interview in early 2008, Atlus USA staff said that the game had met sales expectations. While it met with lower sales than Second Opinion, this was attributed to a crowded market, the game not being a console launch title, and its release close to Super Mario Galaxy . [47]
The game was met with positive reviews from critics, earning a score of 77 out of 100 based on 43 reviews on aggregate website Metacritic . [33] Two different IGN reviews, from Mark Bozon of the main website and James Cottee for the Australian website, praised it as an improvement over Second Opinion and a good continuation of the Trauma Center series. [6] [38] Martin Kitts, writing for Nintendo Gamer , said it was an ideal sequel for series fans. [39] Jonathan Metts of Nintendo World Report praised it as a game accessible to both series veterans and newcomers, with his main complaints being the superficial leaderboard addition and North American cover art design. [40] GameSpy 's Bryan Stratton generally liked the technical improvements and cooperative play, but found its high single-player difficulty and lack of innovations off-putting. [37]
The story met with a mixed response, with some finding it overly silly or lacking in originality. [5] [7] [36] [37] Game Informer 's Matthew Kato called it "fun if you don't take it too seriously", [36] while Heather Campbell, writing for Play Magazine , cited its fully-voiced narrative as the main draw for players. [43] The graphics saw praise for their improvement over Second Opinion, [6] [37] [42] though a few found the more realistic graphics lacking or uncomfortable to look at. [5] [38] Eurogamer 's Keza MacDonald noted the toned-down graphic design as contributing to a more realistic tone, but felt the character design was "a bit uncanny". [5]
The gameplay was generally praised as entertaining. [5] [6] [7] [39] [42] The reviewers for Famitsu enjoyed the gameplay despite noting its similarity to Second Opinion, [35] while Joe Dodson of GameSpot praised the gameplay and additions compared to earlier entries, but found other elements lacking or needing further improvement. [7] PALGN's Adam Ghiggino, while noting some control issues activating the Healing Touch ability, enjoyed his time with it and felt it was worth buying for veterans and newcomers. [42] Several reviews noted a lack of innovation from earlier entries. [37] [40] [43] A few critics also cited it as being overly difficult. [34] [37] [38] [41] Official Nintendo Magazine 's Tom East was less impressed than other reviewers, citing its high difficulty and controls as factors in this. [41] Andrew Fitch of 1Up.com was fairly negative, finding the game too challenging to be enjoyable and called it unfair on casual players. [34] The cooperative mode was met with general praise. [34] [39] [43]
Megami Tensei, marketed internationally as Shin Megami Tensei, is a Japanese media franchise created by Aya Nishitani, Kouji "Cozy" Okada, Ginichiro Suzuki, and Kazunari Suzuki. Primarily developed and published by Atlus, and currently owned by Atlus, the franchise consists of multiple subseries and covers multiple role-playing genres including tactical role-playing, action role-playing, and massively multiplayer online role-playing. The first two titles in the series were published by Namco, but have been almost always published by Atlus in Japan and North America since the release of Shin Megami Tensei. For Europe, Atlus publishes the games through third-party companies.
Trauma Center: Under the Knife is a simulation video game developed by Atlus for the Nintendo DS. The debut entry in the Trauma Center series, it was published in Japan and North America by Atlus in 2005, and by Nintendo in Europe in 2006. Set in a near future where medical science can cure previously incurable diseases, the world's population panics when a new manmade disease called GUILT begins to spread. Doctor Derek Stiles, a surgeon possessing a mystical "Healing Touch", works with the medical research organization Caduceus to find a cure to GUILT. The gameplay combines surgery-based simulation relying on the DS's touchscreen controls with a story told as a visual novel.
Majin Tensei is a series of strategy video games published by Atlus. It is a spin-off from Atlus' Megami Tensei franchise, and began with 1994's Majin Tensei. Since then, four further titles have been released: Majin Tensei II: Spiral Nemesis (1995), Ronde (1997), Majin Tensei: Blind Thinker (2007) and Majin Tensei: Blind Thinker II (2008). The player navigates a field seen from a top-down or three-quarters perspective as a human character, and battles demons; they can also recruit demons, and fuse multiple allied demons to create new, stronger demons.
Trauma Center: Second Opinion is a simulation video game developed by Atlus for the Wii. The second entry in the Trauma Center series, Second Opinion is a remake of the Nintendo DS title Trauma Center: Under the Knife (2005). The game was released in North America and Japan in 2006 by Atlus as a console launch title, and in other regions in 2007 by Nintendo.
Trauma Center is a series of video games developed by Atlus and published by Atlus and Nintendo (Europe). Beginning with Trauma Center: Under the Knife in 2005 for the Nintendo DS, the series released four more entries on the DS and Wii. The gameplay is split between a surgical gameplay simulation, and visual novel storytelling. While the main characters of the games vary, the games share a common setting of a near-future Earth where advanced medical procedures have cured most diseases, including cancer, AIDS, and influenza. A recurring organisation is Caduceus, a worldwide, semi-covert medical research foundation that is a branch of the World Health Organization. The games commonly feature outbreaks of various man-made diseases that pose a significant threat to humanity, as well as themes of bioterrorism.
Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon is a 2007 role-playing video game published by Square Enix for the Wii. It is an installment in the Chocobo series that focuses on Chocobo and his quest to free a town lost in time from eternal forgetfulness. It is a loose sequel to Chocobo's Dungeon 2 on the PlayStation.
Baroque is a roguelike role-playing video game developed by Sting Entertainment. It was originally released for the Sega Saturn in 1998 by Entertainment Software Publishing, then ported to the PlayStation the following year. A remake for PlayStation 2 and Wii was released in Japan by Sting Entertainment in 2007, and later overseas in 2008 from Atlus USA and Rising Star Games (Europe). This version was later released on iOS in 2012, and an enhanced port of the original version on Nintendo Switch in 2020.
Trauma Center: Under the Knife 2 is a 2008 simulation video game developed by Vanguard for the Nintendo DS (DS), and published by Atlus. It is the fourth game in the Trauma Center series and a direct sequel to Trauma Center: Under the Knife (2005). Set three years after the events of Under the Knife, the plot follows protagonist Derek Stiles as he confronts not only the revival of terrorist organisation Delphi and its GUILT disease, but personal insecurities and corporate manipulation. The gameplay combines surgical simulation relying on the DS's touchscreen controls with a story told as a visual novel.
Shiren the Wanderer is a roguelike video game developed by Chunsoft for the Wii. It was released in Japan on June 5, 2008, and in North America on February 9, 2010. A PlayStation Portable version was released later in 2010, with a readjusted difficulty, a new infrastructure mode, and shorter loading times via the ability to install the game.
Arc Rise Fantasia is a 2009 role-playing video game co-developed by Imageepoch and Marvelous Entertainment for the Wii. It was published in Japan by Marvelous Entertainment in 2009 and in North America by Ignition Entertainment in 2010. A planned European release through Rising Star Games was cancelled. The storyline, set in a fantasy world split between hostile factions beset by attacks from destructive Feldragons, protagonist L'Arc Bright Lagoon allies with the priestess Ryfia after he is chosen as a Child of Easa who will remake the world. Gameplay features a growing party led by L'Arc navigating both an overworld and dungeon environments, taking part in turn-based battles.
Zangeki no Reginleiv is a 2010 action video game developed by Sandlot and published by Nintendo for the Wii exclusively in Japan. The story, which is based on Norse mythology, follows the divine warriors Freyr and Freyja in their war against the Jötunn, which heralds the coming of Ragnarok. Gameplay is mission-based, following one of the two protagonists as they fight hordes of enemies. Missions can be completed either in single-playing or in four-player co-op. Along with standard controls, the game supported the Wii MotionPlus expansion.
Trauma Team is a 2010 simulation video game developed and published by Atlus for the Wii. It is the fifth and current final entry in the Trauma Center series. The narrative of Trauma Team follows six protagonists who operate in different sectors of the medical profession, and their united conflict with a virulent infection dubbed "Rosalia". The gameplay combines medical simulation with visual novel-style storytelling through motion comic cutscenes. The different storylines focus on simplified versions of surgery, emergency medicine, endoscopy, diagnosis, orthopedics and forensic medicine.
The Last Story is a Japanese action role-playing game, developed by Mistwalker and AQ Interactive for the Wii video game console. Nintendo published the title in all regions except for North America, where it was published by Xseed Games. Initially released in Japan in 2011, the game was released in western territories through 2012. The Last Story takes place upon the island fortress of Lazulis, in a world that is slowly being drained of life by an unknown force. The story focuses on a group of mercenaries looking for work on Lazulis; one of their number, Zael, dreams of becoming a knight. After receiving the mystical "Mark of the Outsider", Zael becomes involved with a noblewoman named Calista in an ongoing war between humans and the beast-like Gurak. During gameplay, the player controls Zael as he and the mercenary group to which he belongs undertake missions on Lazulis. Zael can command the rest of the mercenary squad during missions, and fights in battles that involve action, tactical and stealth elements. Multiple online multiplayer modes were also present.
Radiant Historia is a role-playing video game co-developed by Atlus and Headlock for the Nintendo DS. It was released in Japan in 2010 by Atlus, and in North America in 2011 by their subsidiary Atlus USA. An expanded remake for the Nintendo 3DS, titled Radiant Historia: Perfect Chronology, was released in 2017 in Japan and released in North America and Europe the following year, with the European version being published by Deep Silver.
Shin Megami Tensei IV is a role-playing video game developed and published by Atlus for the Nintendo 3DS. It is part of the Shin Megami Tensei series, the central series of the Megami Tensei franchise, though no direct story connection exists to previous entries. It was released in May and July 2013 for Japan and North America respectively. It was released digitally in PAL territories on October 2014. The gameplay is reminiscent of previous Shin Megami Tensei games, carrying over the turn-based Press Turn battle system, where players and enemies fight and exploit weaknesses, allowing either side to gain additional turns or lose them.
Shin Megami Tensei V is a 2021 role-playing video game developed by Atlus for Nintendo Switch. It is part of the Shin Megami Tensei series, the central series in the Megami Tensei franchise. It was published by Atlus in Japan, and Sega in the West. The game follows a high school student drawn into Da'at, a post-apocalyptic realm inhabited by warring factions of angels and demons after Lucifer kills the Creator and triggers a contest to remake the world. The story has multiple endings dictated by the player's choices and alliances. The gameplay features free-roaming exploration of Da'at, a turn-based battle system based on exploiting weaknesses, and a system allowing the player to recruit and fuse demons fight alongside them.
Persona Q2: New Cinema Labyrinth is a 2018 dungeon crawler role-playing video game by Atlus for the Nintendo 3DS. It is a spin-off of the Persona series, itself part of the larger Megami Tensei franchise, and a sequel to Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth featuring the cast from Persona 3, Persona 4, and Persona 5. It was released in Japan in November 2018 and worldwide in June 2019.
Klonoa is a side-scrolling platform video game for the Wii developed by Paon and published by Namco Bandai Games. It is a remake of the 1997 PlayStation game Klonoa: Door to Phantomile, the first game in the Klonoa series, updating the game with fully 3D graphics, additional content, and gameplay changes. It was released in Japan in December 2008 and in North America and Europe in May 2009.
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles is a series of video games within the Final Fantasy franchise developed by Square Enix. Beginning in 2003 with the game for the GameCube, the series has predominantly been released on Nintendo gaming hardware and covers multiple genres, including action role-playing. The Crystal Chronicles series takes place in an unnamed world inhabited by four tribes. Recurring themes include creating objects from memory and the importance of family. The gameplay, which has always been aimed at as wide an audience as possible within a genre, generally involves either multiple players or a large group working together.