Toaplan Arcade Collection Volume 1 & 2 Launches August 14

Peter Paltridge

Well-Known Member
Staff member
The latest arcade resurrection from Clear River Games isn’t a remake — it’s a collection. In fact it’s two collections. Toaplan Arcade Collection Volume 1 & 2 are headed for all modern consoles in a week’s time; a repackaging of the Toaplan library. What did Toaplan make for arcades? Shoot-em-ups, and lots of ’em! The majority of these involve flying a ship through space and blasting everything in sight before it can blast you first. If you’re unfamiliar with the Toaplan name, you know of at least one of their titles: Zero Wing, whose botched translation became the source of one of the Internet’s first memes. (We’re told that translation has been left intact in Vol. 2.) Each collection contains eight Toaplan shooters, enhanced with the expected modern bells and whistles like leaderboards, screen filters, a quick save, and other quality-of-life extras. Volume 1 has Tiger-Heli, Flying Shark, Twin Cobra, Fire Shark, Out Zone, FixEight, Dogyuun and Batsugun, while Volume 2 contains Slap Fight, Truxton, Hellfire, Twin Hawk, Zero Wing, Vimana,, Truxton II and Grind Stormer. Clear River says while playing you should keep an eye out for Pipiru, the Toaplan mascot. Usually Japanese developers of the 1980s would put […]
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I like that Clear River Games kept the original style but added useful features like quick save and leaderboards. It means I can still enjoy the challenge without losing all my progress after one mistake. The hidden mascot Pipiru also sounds interesting because it gives me another reason to replay the games and explore the levels more carefully.
 
I only know Zero Wing because of the “All your base” meme, so I am curious to try the actual game. I never played these titles in the arcade, but the list for Volume 2 looks exciting. Grind Stormer and Hellfire sound fun just from the names alone. I also appreciate that the developers kept the translation in Zero Wing untouched. It shows they understand the history and humor behind it.
 
This is a smart move. Many retro collections focus on the same popular companies like Capcom or Konami, so bringing Toaplan shooters back feels fresh. Out Zone is one of my favorite run-and-gun style shooters, and seeing it in Volume 1 makes me want to pre-order. Also, Pipiru being hidden feels like an old-school Easter egg hunt.
 
As someone who grew up in Southeast Asia, I remember playing Flying Shark in local arcades during school breaks. It was very hard but also very satisfying when you made it past a stage. I am glad they included screen filters because the old CRT look adds a special charm. I will probably start with Volume 1 because it has more titles I know.
 
I am not usually into space shooters, but this collection caught my attention. Having quick save means I can try without feeling stressed about losing progress. I might actually enjoy learning these games slowly. The mascot hunt sounds fun too.
 
Honestly, I think they should have combined all 16 games into one package. Splitting them into two volumes feels like they want to make more money. That being said, I am still interested in Batsugun and Truxton II because I heard they are classics in the shooter genre.
 
I like that they are releasing for all major consoles at once. Sometimes retro collections come to only one platform first, and others have to wait. This way everyone can play at launch. I will probably get it on Switch because these types of games are perfect for portable play.
 
Seeing Truxton again brings back memories of my older brother teaching me how to dodge enemy bullets. It was a bonding activity for us. I think I will buy both volumes so we can play together again when he visits. The addition of leaderboards could also make it fun to compete.
 
I think these games are important for gaming history. Toaplan influenced many modern bullet hell developers, so having their library easily available is good for preservation. Even if someone is not a big fan of shooters, it is still worth trying them for educational value.
 

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