Balloon Fight

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Balloon Fight
Developer Nintendo R&D1
Publisher Nintendo
Platform(s) Arcade, NES, Game Boy Advance, Nintendo GameCube, Virtual Console
Release date Arcade:
1984
NES/Famicom:
(JP) January 22, 1985
(NA) June 1986
Game Boy Advance:
(NA) September 16, 2002
(JP) May 21, 2004
Virtual Console:
(EUR) June 8, 2007
(NA) July 16, 2007
(JP) November 13, 2007
Genre Platformer
Rating(s) ESRB:
NES Not Rated (NR)
GBA & Wii Everyone (E)
Mode(s) 1-2 players
Media 2-megabit cartridge
Input Nintendo Entertainment System controller

Balloon Fight was a video game developed by Nintendo in 1984. The arcade version (VS. System) was released in 1984 and the Nintendo Entertainment System version was released in 1985. The gameplay is notably similar to the arcade game Joust.

Gameplay[edit]

The player controls the unnamed Balloon Fighter with two balloons attached to his back. Repeatedly pressing the A or B buttons causes the Balloon Fighter to flap his arms and rise into the air. If one of your balloons is popped, your flotation is decreased, making it harder to rise. You lose a life if both of your balloons are popped by enemy Balloon Fighters, if you fall in the water, get eaten by the large fish near the surface of the water, or if you get hit by lightning.

There are two modes of play: the 1-player/2-player game where the goal is to clear the screen of enemies, and Balloon Trip where the goal is to avoid obstacles in a side-scrolling stage. Balloon Trip is not available in the arcade version.

1-player/2-player game[edit]

Defeat all of the enemies on screen to clear the stage. You can play alone, or co-operatively with a second player. Each player starts with three extra lives, and once these are lost the game ends.

Enemy Balloon Fighters float around on the screen. Hit their balloons to pop them. The enemy will try to float back to safe ground on a parachute, inflate a new balloon and fly away again. Hit the enemy a second time before they inflate a new balloon to defeat them. The enemy can also fall into the water or be eaten by the fish while flying close to the water's surface, although you do not get points for defeating enemies in this way. If an enemy is defeated or falls into the water, a bubble will rise up the screen which can be hit for extra points.

As you progress through the stages, the number of enemies and platforms increases. A spinning obstacle called the Flipper (Propellor in the game's North American instruction manual) appears on later stages.

Every three stages is a bonus stage, where the goal is to burst all of the balloons that float up the screen from the chimneys at the bottom. Hit all twenty balloons for an extra bonus score. If you only have one balloon when you reach the bonus stage, your second balloon will be replenished.

Balloon Trip[edit]

A single-player game where the goal is to avoid the lightning sparks and collect the balloons, aiming to move up the ranks and compete for the high score. The screen scrolls from right to left, and you only have one life.

Aside from the starting platform, there is no ground in this mode. You can find both stationary and moving lightning sparks. If you collect twenty balloons without missing one, you will get bonus points for every balloon you collect thereafter. Hit bubbles to temporarily stop the stage from scrolling.

Ports, sequels, and references[edit]

Super Smash Bros. Melee has a trophy of Balloon Fighter

The game was ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System, the Japan-only NEC PC-8801, the Sharp Zaurus, the Game Boy Advance as Balloon Fight-e for the e-Reader and part of the Famicom Mini Series in Japan.

Nintendo also released a Game & Watch version of the same name, it is based on the NES version's Balloon Trip mode. The protagonist of it is a Balloon Fighter, "Balloon Man" (according to the manual). Unlike Balloon Fighters, Balloon Man uses a rocket suit instead of flapping his hands to elevate while holding balloons.

A sequel to Balloon Fight called Balloon Kid was released on October 1990 in North America and on which expands from the game's roots and revamped it into a full platforming adventure. This title was not released in Japan on the Game Boy, but colorized versions titled as Hello Kitty World for the Family Computer and Balloon Fight GB for the Game Boy Color were only released in Japan.

Balloon Fighter and Flipper trophies are obtainable in Super Smash Bros. Melee, and the Flipper is also a usable item, replacing the Bumper from the original game. The Balloon Fighter was considered for a playable role during the development of Super Smash Bros. Melee, but the Ice Climbers were chosen instead. The original background music for the Balloon Trip in Balloon Fight can be heard in Melee's Icicle Mountain stage as alternate music.

Balloon Fight was also released as one of nineteen collectible Nintendo Entertainment System games in the Nintendo GameCube game Animal Crossing.

Tincle no Balloon Fight DS, Club Nintendo's exclusive game featuring a The Legend of Zelda character named Tingle was released in April 2007.

External links[edit]