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Sin & Punishment: Star Successor (Nintendo Wii) Review
Review by 
8.8/10 from 22 user ratings
 
I have been wanting to write a new review for the Negative World for quite some time now. I have posted a few reviews of mine on the site, but they were all written back before we set up the review functionality here. I think my most recent review was for Resident Evil 4; not the Wii edition, the Gamecube game. As you can see, it has been awhile. And it was a tough decision choosing which game to use to break my born again review virginity with. Although there are recent games which I think are superior to Sin & Punishment: Star Successor (Super Mario Galaxy 2, for instance), when all is said and done, I decided to choose a game that deserves to have more attention called to it than it has received.


If this doesn't make you think of Gradius, I don't know what will.

My first experience with the Sin & Punishment franchise, as it was for many in the West, was the recent release of the original game on the Virtual Console. I bought it on a whim, hopped into it, and was instantly hooked. It reminded me a lot of Starfox 64, a game which, despite having several sequels, has never been matched since. Sin & Punishment was a bit short, and the controls were iffy, but I was instantly in love, and gave the game several playthroughs. When the sequel was announced, I had reservations as to whether Treasure could hit the same magic so many years later, but let my expectations get fairly high nonetheless.

Little did I expect the successor (pun intended) to surpass my already high expectations and then some.

So what exactly is Sin & Punishment: Star Successor? Well, the quick answer is that it is one part of the aforementioned Starfox 64 combined with one part Ikaruga (mostly the balls to walls nonstop action part), with a whole lot of Gradius boss rush thrown in for good measure. You can choose to play as either the boy (Isa) or the girl (Kachi), which have similar moves, with just enough variety between them to make it worth trying them both out. There is a story involved, but it is semi-ridiculous and often barely coherent, and the story bits are mostly brief and unobtrusive before they let you hop right back into the action.


Somehow everything becomes more badass when it is underwater.

For the majority of the game you play in a 3rd person perspective on rails with full control over your character, ala Starfox 64, although there is a ton of variety in how you play, including 2D sections, a vehicle section, and a couple of areas and bosses with control / perspective mechanics that are unique to them and them alone. There is also a ton of variety in the environments; you will battle across cities, underwater, in fortresses, even in outer space. There are a few control options, but I can't really see the point of using anything but analog to move and pointer to aim and shoot. The game is incredibly intense, and feels like an onslaught that rarely lets up. You are generally dodging and shooting at everything in sight like your lives depends on it ("because they do"), although you also have a melee attack which can be used both to attack enemies whom are near, and to deflect certain projectile attacks back at enemies. There are lasers and projectiles and all kinds of things flying all over the screen, environmental elements to dodge and destroy, hundreds, if not thousands of enemies per stage, and multiple bosses, with multiple life bars, often with multiple forms, with many of the bosses followed directly by another boss. Think the boss rushes of the Gradius games, but not constrained to a single stage. And unlike the original Sin & Punishment game, there is a fairly forgiving checkpoint system, which is a very good thing, because this is a super tough game, and you will be dying a lot (provided you play on medium or hard.)

Simply put, this game feels like the evolution of the intense action SHMUPs of the 2D era, brought into the 3D world in brilliant form.


One of the many bosses whom is large, angry, and totally inconsiderate of your basic survival needs.

The graphics are also pretty exciting, if not technically the most impressive, and fit the overall creative feel of the game. The music is fast paced and catchy, and keeps you coming back for more. Overall the presentation is very slick, outside of the aforementioned goofy storyline and the somewhat poor quality voice acting that often goes with it. And if you were a fan of the first Sin & Punishment game but felt it was a bit short, I have good news for you; Star Successor is significantly meatier, probably close to twice as long as the first game. High score nuts will also find an incredibly deep scoring system for both individual stages and the entire game, and online leaderboards which, despite a few annoyances in menu navigations, work very well (and due to the poor sales of the game, it is very possible to place high up in the leaderboards!) There is even a 2 player co-op mode, though the second player only controls an on-screen cursor for shooting.

I could go on and on, but in the end it comes down to the fact that Sin & Punishment: Star Successor is an incredible game, and way too many people never gave it a second glance. You probably already own Super Mario Galaxy 2 and Metroid: Other M, and you may even have a copy of Monster Hunter Tri or Red Steel 2 in your possession. But if you pass on Sin & Punishment: Star Successor, you are missing out on not just one of the best Wii games of the year, but one of the best Wii games yet, period. It's that good. So get on it, son.

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 Excellent  9.5 / 10
10/04/10, 10:30
 
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nate38 said:
I rented it from GameFly. Then I bought it from GameFly.
Then I bought it from Best Buy, too.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 00:29
@Stephen With strippers, and ... well, you know the rest.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 01:26
This is a fantastic game. BUY IT!!!!!

Yeah, you. Buy it. Why are you still reading this? You should be out buying the game

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 01:54
@GelatinousEncore
I already told you guys, I totally bought it already! still unopened

In my defense, I kind of wanted to beat the N64 version first. Plus, I finished a game today!

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 02:26   Edited:  08/29/12, 02:27
You're never going to beat the N64 version unless you set it to easy, at which point you can beat it in like 2 hours or so, so what is your excuse man? Do it! NOW!!!

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 02:38
Pffttt... easy...

Actually, I'm not too fond of the control scheme(s) of the VC version.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 02:49
@Anand Yeah, jumping with the GCN controller sucks. Those squishy shoulder buttons were not made for rapid fire. Haven't tried the classic controller.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 02:55
@nate38
Yeah, I've always hated using the GCN triggers as digital buttons, too.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 02:57   Edited:  08/29/12, 02:57
I'm also in the "bought it, haven't opened it" club.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 03:21
I bought it a few weeks ago when Best Buy had it for $5. I played the first level and then noticed that it won't let you copy saves to a SD card, so I'll wait to play it on the Wii U.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 03:23
You guys gotta step on it. It took me a while to open the game too, but once I did... man. You can skip all the cutscenes so there's no excuse.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 03:24
@Anand Control scheme is tough to get used to, though it is possible. I think I switched some stuff around to find what I preferred. The Wii game controls way better.

Posted by 
 on: 08/29/12, 03:26
Got around to starting this game, actually because I wanted to have something to write in the Club Nintendo Post Play Survey. Even though I'm not a big SHMUP guy, I'm having fun. Hopefully it doesn't get too hard on Normal mode. It's clear that they put a lot of effort into this game, it's too bad it tanked so bad. I wonder if there was any way for it to be a success. Probably not, unfortunately. If they'd made it a downloadable game, It probably would have suffered in presentation, but that could have made it more profitable at least.

A few questions:

Can you save and quit at any point and come back to your last checkpoint or do you have to beat a stage?

Are the two different characters just a different control option (manual or auto-aim) or is it different some way depending on who you choose?

Posted by 
 on: 09/11/12, 18:56
IIRC they have different super moves too. Shit, it's been a while I haven't played this. I'm sure I forgot where all the hidden bonus things are, and there is no online guide as far as I know.

Gonna bust this one out soon, myself. Thread title is dead accurate.

Posted by 
 on: 09/11/12, 19:04
Going back to what I said about it being downloadable, this could be a good candidate for getting some residual profits from the game by releasing it for download on Wii U at a small price and giving it exposure on the Wii U Shop.

Posted by 
 on: 09/11/12, 19:11
They sure could have gotten rid of the cinematics, in case of a downloadable title. But the problem on Wii would have been the file size. Surely we would have gotten fewer, and worse, levels. I'm happy we got what we got, in the end.

Posted by 
 on: 09/11/12, 19:18
How much do you guys think the awkward title played into the failure of this game? To me, it sounds like a game where I'm going to get whipped by someone in a gimp costume.

I wonder if anyone was disappointed that it wasn't that game.

Posted by 
 on: 09/11/12, 19:27
Haha, the box art is badass though.



Posted by 
 on: 09/11/12, 19:48
As far as the characters go, the girl's super attack lets you lock onto multiple things on screen(or hit one thing with several simultaneous blasts) while the guys super attack only lets you hit one thing. The guy's super attack charges alot quicker, though.

Posted by 
 on: 09/12/12, 05:05
I think his is more powerful too.

Posted by 
 on: 09/12/12, 05:17
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