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Fantasy Zone (USA / Brazil)

Sega Game Gear
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
1990
80
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✪ Reviewed on November 19, 2024
72

Fantasy Zone on Game Gear: Sega's colourful and idyllic shoot'em up in portable form. The series' bubbles and cute enemies are well reproduced. A timeless Sega classic.

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Category
Shooter 1 player 3+
Description
The player pilots a spacecraft to destroy enemy waves in this classic Sega horizontal shoot'em up for Game Gear. Published by Sega, released in the United States and Brazil in October 1990. Horizontal shoot'em up with bomb and missile fire, power-ups transforming the ship, colourful bosses. US and Brazilian editions.

Fantasy Zone review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Short"
Technical info
💾0,08 MB 📅26/10/1990
Published by Sega

Fantasy Zone (Game Gear) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Fantasy Zone, the port of Sega's colourful, dreamlike shoot 'em up on Game Gear, in its American and Brazilian edition. An adaptation of an arcade pop classic with the Opa-Opa ship, it charms through its pastel aesthetic, still iconic. Its collecting interest lies in the series' lasting aura in the Sega pantheon more than in any notable rarity of this Western pressing.

Memorable bosses

Behind its pastel colors and pudgy ship, each zone closes on an oversized guardian that clashes with the sweetness of the setting. Tight patterns, a weapon shop to juggle between assaults and foes with memorable silhouettes set up a shoot'em up craftier than it looks. This contrast between a childlike world and demanding fights forges a unique, lasting identity.

Is Fantasy Zone still worth playing in 2026?

A psychedelic Sega horizontal shooter, Fantasy Zone has you pilot the rotund ship Opa-Opa through pastel settings of unbridled whimsy, buying weapons and bonuses with the money of downed enemies. The freedom of movement, the inventive bosses and the pop aesthetic make it a classic apart, perfectly carried over to Game Gear. The visual charm and the gameplay loop have lost nothing. For a fan of offbeat shmups or someone curious about Sega heritage, the title keeps an intact freshness and personality.

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