

#Strikers 1945 ending screen tv#
This will allow you to change the display setting between Landscape (the default setting which places the vertical arcade screen in the middle of your display – be that the TV or the Nintendo Switch screen) and portrait which is excellent on the undocked Switch as it pretty much replicates the arcade experience. Since this is an arcade port of a 1995 game on a 21st Century console, Zerodiv has included a handy Option Menu you can bring up with the – button. Each difficulty setting also has its own leaderboard, so you can always aim to improve your high score at a particular difficulty. After this, you can give it another go with a different plane, or even increase the difficulty setting for an added challenge.
#Strikers 1945 ending screen full#
Overall, based on your skill with vertical shoot ’em ups of ages past (and on the difficulty you play in), you’ll spend 30-40 minutes doing a full run of the whole game. You’ll need to make good use of your bombs to stay alive since at points the game approaches bullet hell territory. As you can probably guess, at the end of the level you’ll fight against a large and deadly boss that will throw everything it has at you. The Bomb obviously adds one more Bomb to your arsenal, while the Bonus will increase your score.Įach of the game’s levels features hundreds of enemies trying to destroy you every step of the way. As you fly around each level, you’ll find items to aid you, such as the Power Up which increases your power level by one while adding one escort aircraft. Once you’re flying, the rules are very simple: destroy everything in your way and avoid enemy fire. The next step is selecting one of the six available planes, each with its own strengths and weaknesses, not to mention a slightly different “feel” when flying around. Each difficulty also has a name, starting with Monkey (1) before continuing with Child (2), Very Easy (3), Easy (4), Normal (5), and Hard (6), all the way up to Very Hard (7). Press the A button, and you’ be asked to select one of the available difficulty options, represented by numbers (1 to 7). The game begins with a nice full motion video montage showing planes going into battle to get you started. The A button is for rapid fire, so you’ll probably be going back and forth between it and the Y button as needed. The B button activates your bomb, which is great for times when you are surrounded and need to decimate your opponents. You move around with either the D-Pad or the analog stick and can attack with the Y button – which also calls for a formation attack when it is held and released after a certain time. This being and arcade release, the action is fast-paced, and the controls are easy to understand.
