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Bakuretsu Muteki Bangaioh (Japan)

also known as Bangai-O
Sega Dreamcast
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1999
85
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✪ Reviewed on April 28, 2023
82

An explosive, hilarious Treasure shoot 'em up firing on every cylinder. Gigantic bosses, frantic pacing and co-op runs that turn into fireworks shows. A wonderfully unhinged must play.

Your verdict
Category
Action 1 player 7+
Description
Riki and partners escape in their armed ship by destroying enemy hordes in all directions in this Treasure shoot'em up. Published by ESP, released in Japan in January 1999. Multidirectional shoot'em up with 360° fire, chained power-ups and explosive rage system, spectacular bosses. Japanese edition.

Bakuretsu Muteki Bangaioh review

3/5
Art direction
"Polished"
2/5
Music
"Decent"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Short"
Technical info
💾0,62 GB 📅28/01/1999
Published by ESP

Bakuretsu Muteki Bangaioh (Dreamcast) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Bakuretsu Muteki Bangaioh is the original Japanese release of Treasure's shoot-em-action on Dreamcast, a direct sequel to the N64 game with an almost completely rewritten build. Collector value comes from a very limited local print, the cult status of Treasure among 2D arcade fans, and the distinct Japanese sleeve, more colourful than the international versions.

Memorable bosses

Crafted by Treasure, the guardians of this shoot-meets-run-and-gun hybrid flood the screen with projectiles, to the point that your special attack grows stronger as the danger mounts. Taking on these mechanical behemoths means turning chaos into a weapon and savoring a gleeful, unabashed excess laced with humor. Their visual generosity and frantic pace make them jubilant set-pieces.

An underrated gem

Treasure never did things by halves: in this multidirectional shooter, the more the screen floods with enemy fire, the more devastating your counterattack becomes. Long confined to Japan and to occasionally unreadable chaos, it nonetheless rewards boldness and timing. Fans of frantic scoring and clever design will find a genuine gem of inventiveness.

Is Bakuretsu Muteki Bangaioh still worth playing in 2026?

Straight out of Treasure's lab, Bangai-O is still a gleefully chaotic oddity where hundreds of missiles erupt across the screen at once. The pace is electric, the humour around Riki and Mami delightfully offbeat, and the saturation based counter system thrilling once it clicks. Modest visuals, yet astonishingly readable, the game has not aged a day in terms of feel. For fans of demanding shooters and clever mechanics, the experience still holds its own next to current releases.

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