Konami's foundational horizontal shoot'em up on NES. Vic Viper ship, capsule power-up system, memorable bosses. Still magnificent and essential to understand genre history.
Your verdict
Category
Shooter1 player7+
Description
Horizontal shoot-'em-up featuring the Vic Viper spacecraft battling the biological Bacterian empire. Published by Konami, released in Europe in 1986. Vic Viper in side-scrolling view with power-ups to chain, missiles, double shot and laser and colossal bosses. NES port of Konami's Gradius arcade, founding the genre.
Gradius review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
A pillar of the shoot-'em-up, Konami's music deploys nervy, heroic electronic themes that propel the Vic Viper through space. Each level pulses with a galvanising energy perfectly in tune with the millimetric action. This pioneering sonic identity left a lasting mark on the genre and a whole generation.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Choosing your upgrades from a power-up bar, equipping Options that double your firepower and carving a path through swarms of enemies: the upgrade system makes it a shooter of exhilarating depth. The satisfaction of building the perfect ship is instant. Demanding, elegant and fiercely replayable, a genre pillar that marked history.
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Punishing"
A pioneer of the power-up shoot-'em-up, it introduced that upgrade bar where every choice commits the rest of your run. Losing your ship means starting over bare against tight waves and demanding bosses: equipment management trumps reflexes. Elegant and formidable, it shaped the genre and remains a test of nerve for fans of space shooters.
The European PAL NES release of Konami's founding shooter, largely overshadowed by the Life Force/Salamander line that took commercial precedence. The PAL print was short, and CIB in the original cardboard box is one of the harder PAL Konami targets. The cart is also where the Konami Code took its most famous form (Up Up Down Down...), making it an identity piece beyond raw physical scarcity.
Memorable bosses
A benchmark of the horizontal shooter, the Vic Viper's odyssey punctuates its zones with the Big Core and other fortresses whose core you must riddle under a deluge of fire. The power-up bar, to be managed before the assault, turns prepping for duels into strategy. Spare yet formidable, these guardians laid down a grammar of the shmup boss still imitated today.
Is Gradius still worth playing in 2026?
Gradius on NES is the port of Konami's foundational horizontal shooter. Vic Viper, the capsule power-up system, memorable levels and iconic bosses make for a genre classic. The cart suffers a few technical compromises compared to the arcade, with some flickering and choppier scrolling, but the spirit stays intact. Still essential today to understand a saga that would peak on Famicom with Gradius II.