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Primal Rage is a versus fighting game developed by Atari Games and published by Time Warner Interactive in 1994 as an arcade game. Toys, comics, and other merchandise tie-ins were also produced.

Story[]

Mankind built a great technological society with towering glass office buildings, efficient and vast computer networks, and satellites that instantly broadcast a thousand different television channels to any corner of the Earth. Humans wield technology with razorlike precision, carving whatever they desire from the once-verdant frontiers of a nurturing planet. Humankind is the undisputed king of the Earth.

But this dominance quickly vanishes.

Without warning, a great meteor strikes the Earth and launches the Cataclysms. Immense tidal waves wash over the great cities, shattering the great glass towers. Massive earthquakes fracture the continents. Enormous volcanoes burst from deep within the planet's core and send huge towers of smoke and debris into the stratosphere, destroying the great satellite network. Technology is wiped out, millions of humans die, and society is in ruins.

Humankind is on the verge of extinction and caught with its guard down.

The power unleashed in the Cataclysms also weakened ancient bonds. From deep within the earth, the great gods come. These titans, ancient creatures who have lain dormant for millennia, are immense in power and size. They embody the primal instincts needed for survival. Raging within them, burning for release, are the powerful forces of hunger and survival, life and death, insanity and decay, and good and evil.

The gods — and humankind — awaken to find it is a new Urth.

The remaining humans know their only chance for survival is to appease the gods. They band together, forming tribes. Each tribe backs a god, celebrating their triumphs and sharing in their defeat. If the tribe is lucky and their god is dominant, they might be given a chance to live.

But the gods are angry, and only one can survive to conquer the new Urth.

Get ready to Rage!

Characters[]

The Virtuous Beasts[]

The virtuous beasts represent the side of the sacred. This faction wants to keep the peace on Urth.

  • Blizzard - The cryokinetic Yeti with white fur, silver hair, and blue skin who is the God of Good and Virtue. He was frozen in a glacier within the Himalayas until a meteor struck Urth.
  • Armadon - The spiky Triceratops who is the God of Life. He lived peacefully beneath the Earth's crust until a meteor struck Urth.
  • Talon - The striped Velociraptor who is the God of Survival. He was the chief of the Raptor Clan on a South Pacific island until a meteor struck Urth.
  • Sauron - The large Tyrannosaurus rex who is the God of Hunger. He eats the flesh of humanity in order to stay immortal ever since a meteor striking Earth woke him from his sleep of ages.

The Destructive Beasts[]

The destructive beasts represent the side of the occult. This faction wants to plunge the world into further chaos for their own benefit.

  • Chaos - The vulgar ape with red fur, pinkish-clay hair, and black skin who is the God of Decay. He was formerly a witch doctor who became a prehistoric ape as the result of an evolution experiment gone wrong.
  • Vertigo - The female cobra/dinosaur who is the Goddess of Insanity. She was originally imprisoned on the Moon before the meteor struck Urth.
  • Diablo - The hellish fire-breathing Tyrannosaurus who is the God of Evil and Destruction. He was trapped in his fiery prison until a meteor struck Urth.

Gameplay[]

Primal Rage is a traditional two-dimensional fighting game in which two players select characters to battle each other in one-on-one combat, or a single player finishes a campaign of fights against the CPU over increasing difficulty. The final battle of the single player game consisted of fighting all the other CPU monsters with an increased power bar made available in a mini-game prior to the fight. A total of seven characters are available for players to select from (as listed below). Each character has his or her own specialized set of attack moves and abilities. In the game, the object is to deplete the opposing character's health meter as fast as possible. If "Game Gore" (an option on some consoles) is switched on, then a defeated character's heart will explode into a bloody mess and their brain will dissolve to ashes.

While fighting, human tribesmen will wander nearby and worship their gods during battle. This allows for the creatures to toss them around or devour some to regain strength (eating opponents' worshippers will add a bonus to one's score, while eating one's own will penalize the player). Prior to the final battle, a mini game commences in which one is required to eat as many worshippers as possible to increase health for the endurance round. An easter egg of human volleyball could be triggered by keeping worshippers off the ground batting them back and forth between characters. This is only feasibly possible when both characters are human-controlled, as the CPU is not programmed to interact in this fashion.

Unlike most fighting games, where special moves are performed by moving the joystick, followed by pressing one or more buttons, Primal Rage features a system where the player holds down certain buttons, then performs the joystick movements.

Later revisions of the arcade game added the ability to perform "special moves" the more traditional way, with motion followed by button presses, but kept the original method as well. After the opponent is defeated, a brief moment is allowed for the player to perform a fatality that finishes the adversary in a more dramatic fashion; these were performed in a similar manner to the special moves. Although all characters feature three finishing moves, some of them were more Easter Eggs than fatalities, such as Vertigo's "La Vache Qui Rit" (french for "the laughing cow"), a fatality in which Vertigo transforms her opponent into a cow, which moos and runs away. Using a Fatality on an opponent means that they will appear flashing in the final battle. It also means the player will be able to do extra damage to them as well during the Final Battle.

Homage[]

As originally printed in an issue of GamePro in 1995, there is evidence to suggest that each character is a tongue-in-cheek reference to a fighter from the original Mortal Kombat. The individual traits, personality, and special moves of each character resemble those of a counterpart in the Mortal Kombat lineup. Armadon's power of electricity is like Raiden. Blizzard has freezing attacks that disable the opponent like Sub-Zero. Diablo has a fatality where he breathes fire on the opponent which burns their skin, leaving a skeleton like Scorpion. Talon's aerial kick resembles Liu Kang's flying kick. Sauron has moves which produce shadows, similar to Johnny Cage. Vertigo fits the lone female character producing ring-shaped projectiles similar in nature to Sonya. Finally, the barbaric nature and cannonball move of Chaos is comparable to Kano.

Also, the concept of two fighters sharing near identical appearances (in this case, Sauron and Diablo, or Chaos and Blizzard) resembles that of Scorpion and Sub-Zero in Mortal Kombat. A similar technique was applied to Ken and Ryu of Street Fighter II.

This game was tributed in the "Game Over" episode of Dexter's Laboratory, in which Dee Dee and Dexter play a Primal Rage parody, "Primal Fighter". Dexter's character of choice was a Sauron lookalike, while Dee Dee favored the Blizzard lookalike.

Controversy[]

As with other bloody U.S. based fighting titles of the time (most notably Mortal Kombat), Primal Rage sparked considerable controversy due to its violence level, depicting gory fatalities and the live consuming


of humans. Though it was a bloody game, Primal Rage was rated "T" for Teen, yet that did not stop its critics from lumping it together with the Mature-rated Mortal Kombat. To appease the critics, the game was withdrawn, re-programmed and re-released several times. Later arcade incarnations of Primal Rage included a "Gore/No Gore" toggle switch which, when flipped to the "No Gore" setting, disabled the use of Fatalities, the eating of humans, and all of the game's blood.

Home console ports of Primal Rage retained all the of the game's original content however, which was more than enough to continue the controversy surrounding the game. According to Victar's Primal Rage FAQ (section 7.4) the June 1996 issue of GamePro confirms that Ellie Rovella of Gilbert, Arizona became enraged when her 11-year-old son bought and played Genesis' Primal Rage, using GamePro's strategy guide to execute Chaos' golden shower/urination fatality. Rovella was so outraged she not only returned the game, but also launched a grass-roots campaign. Ironically the Super Nintendo version, in which the particular fatality was removed entirely, displaying a "No Cheeze!" symbol (a sign that was generally used to notify the player that he or she had performed an illegal combo) at the top of the screen if it was attempted, was also pulled from the shelves.

Ports[]

Primal Rage was ported to numerous platforms: PlayStation, 3DO Interactive Multiplayer, Sega 32X, Atari Jaguar CD, Sega Saturn, Amiga, Mega Drive/Genesis, Super Nintendo, Sega Game Gear, Game Boy and PC CD-ROM. The arcade version of Primal Rage is also included in Midway Arcade Treasures 2 for PS2, Xbox, and Nintendo GameCube. A pirated port has been released for the Master System and only has 3 playable characters Chaos, Blizzard, and Sauron.

The port for PlayStation features slightly scaled down graphics, some color loss, and animation frames that sometimes fail to play during animations getting the characters stuck in a single pose for an attack when more frames should be shown. The audio is also a little odd. Blizzard's death and win cries are switched, Chaos' death cry doesn't play but is in the sound test, the final battle themes are in the sound test but don't play during the actual final battle, and The Attract intro from the arcade version has music cut off early. Several jingles, such as the Fatality Jingle, and death jingles are not played either but are apparently in the ROM but not listed in the sound test. The Final Battle victory theme will play on the PS3 as it uses emulation to play PS1 games. This is the only way to hear this music track. These issues are due to the PlayStation frequently reading data from the disc. This is one of the few ports that shows the combo names when they are executed. It also has an opening FMV sequence.

The 3DO port was published by LG Electronics. This port features smaller sprites than other ports but not as small as the Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, SNES, Game Gear, Amiga, Gameboy, and Atari Jaguar port sprites. The music synths are a little different as well. It also has the opening FMV from the PlayStation port, plus additional FMV videos showcasing the beasts the player chooses during single player.

The Sega Saturn port is similar to the Playstation port but has numerous jingles that went unused in the Playstation port present, FMV sequence intros and endings for each character in addition to the opening FMV, same with with 3DO port, and fewer instances of the game having to read data from the disc. Strangely, combo names are absent. The FMVs can be turned off in the options. When off, the arcade attract intro will play on the main menu and the intro FMVs will be turned off. The Ending FMV's will be replaced by the standard arcade version endings.

The Amiga port has watered down sounds and graphics but large stages allowing more room. The port suffers from long load times and requires a disk swap with every round (unless the game is installed into the HDD of course ).

The Mega Drive version was based on version 1.7, thus the new additional fatality, special moves, sounds, and new animations were removed. It has more animation than the SNES version, but less vibrant color. There is also an exclusive Easter Egg on the Cheat menu that says "Okay, right?" When this is selected, if the player chooses Diablo, his followers will be replaced with a Devil that uses the head of Probe Entertainment's former CEO and founder, Fergus McGovern. Regardless if Diablo wins or loses, Fergus will jump up and down in celebration. Fergus will change palletes to match whatever Diablo's pallete is. Diablo's Fireball Fatality is different in this version featuring three Fireballs that fly around the opponent rather than one huge fireball. The 32X version is based on the Mega Drive port, with larger and colorful sprites. It has music that makes use of the 32X's additional sound channels for better music and cleaner voice clips. The "Okay, right?" cheat is not present in the cheat menu for some strange reason. Diablo's Fireball fatality is also the same as the Genesis version.

The Super Nintendo port censors Chaos' golden shower fatality. This version also doesn't shrink the evil palette swaps (i.e. Sauron - Diablo) and lacks the ending picture. The combos are easier, but the gameplay is slower. This port features a few additions, such as Vertigo's fatalities each have different colored rings. Diablo's Fireball fatality is different here as well but he sends a slow moving fireball across the ground that cooks the opponent upon contact.

There were multiple ports for MS-DOS and Windows PCs. These ports feature different sound effects, larger sprites and all the frames of animation from the arcade version. The game CD included three different editions of the game, one for systems with 4 MB RAM, another for 8 MB and one for 16 MB, each with increasing fidelity to the arcade game. The music is made up of MIDIS and features two tracks not in any other version of the game that replace Sauron and Chaos' normal themes.

There is a glitch in the PlayStation and Atari Jaguar CD versions. After choosing Sauron or Armadon, the game will go to the VS. screen, the load time will be longer than usual, and sometimes the two will have all of the additional frames that were cut due to console limitations, meaning smoother animation.[citation needed] If the game moves on to the next round, the animations will return to the edited versions. The PlayStation's character select uses the full animations.

ROM encryption[]

The Primal Rage design team implemented an unusual and largely unknown security method into the arcade machine's coding that prevented the full features of the game from becoming active. As a result, the game has never been accurately emulated on any platform to this day.

Blood would be "censored" in that it would be colored a yellowish color with a brown shading. Also, fatalities could not be performed and many special moves were not available, most notably characters with "Pouncing" moves couldn't land on the victim (Sauron's leaping bone bash, Diablo's pulverizer, Chaos' flying buttocks slam). Another emulation problem was you could no longer chain attacks which greatly decreased the chance of performing a combo. In the original arcade version, it was possible to repeat attacks such as Diablo's low 1 and standing 3+4.

This affects the version of the game on Midway Arcade Treasures 2 and Midway Arcade Treasures Deluxe Edition, which was expected to feature an arcade perfect rendition of the game, but provided a censored and incomplete version instead. The original programming team has since moved on to other things. Some of the programmers have actually departed the electronic entertainment business altogether and could not be located for questioning regarding the game's security lock outs. Others who have been contacted expressed no interest in unlocking the ROM BIOS for freeware distribution or security corrections. Thus, no ROM exists for Primal Rage that is not censored in some way.

Gallery[]

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