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This article is about the DOS game titled Mega Man. For the first game on the NES, see Mega Man.

Mega Man, also called Megaman,[1] is a game in the original Mega Man series licensed by Capcom USA and developed by Hi-Tech Expression in association with Rozner Labs for DOS, released in the US only in 1990. It was followed by its own sequel, titled Mega Man 3: The Robots are Revolting also for DOS PCs, despite there not being any Mega Man 2.

Story[]

From the game box:

"Break the death-grip of the ultimate computer!"

As Mega Man, the robot wunderkind created to save the world, match your mettle against the mind of Dr. Wily, a megalomaniac with the hardware to match his ego! Search Wily's mechano-botic complex, from its mind-bending maze of electrified corridors, through giant whirling turbines and into paralyzing force fields.

You must find the three keys into the core room! Leap pools of supercharged gunk. Pulverize ion-sucking Batimms and other insidious insectobots. Face a phalanx of slithering, seething cyborgs, all programmed to turn you into radioactive waste! At last, confront CRORQ, a megacomputer revived by the psychotic calculations of Wily's mad brain.

Survive and challenge the mastermind behind the superbrain, Dr. Wily himself!"

Enemies[]

Screenshots[]

Trivia[]

  • While the dog enemy in the intro stage can be destroyed, it will immediately respawn and is not easily outrun. The best option is to run away from it, jumping away from it when it pounces, until one reaches the door.
  • Unlike other games, Mega Man only features three Robot Masters, unless one counts Buster Rod G, Mega Water S, and Hyper Storm H from Mega Man: The Wily Wars's Wily Tower mode.
  • This is the first Mega Man game to include an intro stage.
  • The game features no music, and uses inferior sounds compared to their NES counterparts, due to relying entirely on the PC speaker, though the graphics are, from a technical standpoint, superior to the NES version in EGA or VGA mode.
  • Although featured on the box art, Rush does not make an appearance in the game.
  • The box art for this game is very similar to that of Mega Man: Dr. Wily's Revenge; the only difference is that this one has a picture of Rush on it.
    • The box art for this game is an edited version of Mega Man 3's box art, where the background is different, placement of Rush is to the left of Mega Man (as opposed to directly behind Mega Man) and Spark Man, Top Man, and the Wily Castle are not present.
    • Although a picture of Spark Man appears on the back of the box, he is not included in the game.
  • When Mega Man uses a Robot Master's weapon, he does not change color.
  • As with many other Mega Man games from when the series first began, Dr. Wily's name is misspelled.
  • This was the first Mega Man game to use platforms which could be jumped through (one can jump up through the floors as well as down by holding down and jumping), a feature that was heavily used in the Zero and ZX games.
  • The brick wall, wooden box and nuke graphics were also later used in Duke Nukem.
  • The game is, from a technical standpoint, impressive in that it has much better scrolling than contemporary PC games. It is also very well optimized, as it can run at high framerates even on a 286 with VGA graphics. Unfortunately it doesn't have a properly locked speed, so the game runs too fast on later CPUs. A patch exists to remedy this problem.
  • There is a cheat code to become invincible in the game, at the initial setup menu press and release "N" on the keyboard then press and release "D" on the keyboard, after that select "game start" and no enemy can hurt you. [Verification needed]

Videos[]

External links[]

References[]

  1. As written on the game's floppy disk.


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