Difference between revisions of "Thunder Force III"
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Sever = | Sever = | ||
*Damage: 6 per segment, 36 total per beam. | *Damage: 6 per segment, 36 total per beam. | ||
| − | An upgrade to Twin-Shot. Sever is by far the strongest weapon in the entire game, firing high-speed lasers that rapidly alternate from the top and bottom of the Styx. The laser fired is split into four segments which quickly | + | An upgrade to Twin-Shot. Sever is by far the strongest weapon in the entire game in terms of damage, firing high-speed lasers that rapidly alternate from the top and bottom of the Styx. The laser fired is split into four segments which quickly pulverizes any enemy in front of it and trivializes bosses. Adding CLAWs provide two extra beams, effectively doubling the damage output. |
|-| | |-| | ||
Lancer = | Lancer = | ||
*Damage: 9 per bullet. | *Damage: 9 per bullet. | ||
| − | + | An upgrade to Back-Fire. Lancer fires two large projectiles from behind and one from the front. It has far better coverage compared to its non-upgraded counterpart, being very effective on large groups of enemies coming from behind while also providing decent firepower from the front. With CLAWs, two extra projectiles fire from behind. | |
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Wave = | Wave = | ||
*Damage: 6 per segment. | *Damage: 6 per segment. | ||
| − | + | Fires large wave projectiles that pass through terrain. If the top or bottom makes contact with an enemy, the projectile's other half will split and spread apart. Wave is useful for crowd control, however it can be overshadowed by Hunter in most use cases if the weapon is available. With CLAWs, two of the split projectiles fire from them, increasing the weapon's coverage significantly. | |
|-| | |-| | ||
Fire = | Fire = | ||
*Damage: 18 per missile, 6 per bullet, 12 per CLAW wave. | *Damage: 18 per missile, 6 per bullet, 12 per CLAW wave. | ||
| − | + | Launches anti-ground missiles directly above and below that crawl along the ceiling, floor, and walls alongside a standard shot from the front. While Fire is effective at taking out ground targets, the missiles' ability to crawl on any surface makes it useful to hit enemies in hard to reach areas. Although this weapon suffers from being overshadowed by the Hunter weapon. When using CLAWs, they will fire out short-ranged wave projectiles, providing extra defense from incoming enemies all around. | |
|-| | |-| | ||
Hunter = | Hunter = | ||
*Damage: 3 per missile. | *Damage: 3 per missile. | ||
| − | + | Fires volleys of 3 homing missiles, which home onto any enemy on the screen. Despite being the weakest damage-wise, they provide the best coverage in the entire game, making most sections in the game significantly easier. CLAWs add two additional missiles to each volley. | |
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CLAW = | CLAW = | ||
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==== Extra Lives ==== | ==== Extra Lives ==== | ||
Score based extra lives are earned at 20,000, 50,000, then every other 50,000 points. Extra lives can also be found as an item picked up throughout the game. | Score based extra lives are earned at 20,000, 50,000, then every other 50,000 points. Extra lives can also be found as an item picked up throughout the game. | ||
| + | |||
=== Rank === | === Rank === | ||
---- | ---- | ||
Revision as of 07:05, 13 March 2026
Title screen
| Developer: | Technosoft |
|---|---|
| Music: | Toshiharu Yamanishi, Tomomi Ōtani |
| Program: | Izumi Fukuda, Takashi Iwanaga, Haruhiko Ohtsuka |
| Art: | Osamu Tsujikawa, Yoichi Muto |
| Release date: | June 8, 1990 |
| Previous game: | Thunder Force II |
| Next game: | Thunder Force IV |
Thunder Force III, released in 1990, is the third entry in Tecnhosoft's Thunder Force series of games, and the second to be released for the Sega Genesis. This game notably removes the top-view stages entirely and simplifies the weapon system, making the game much more easier compared to its predecessor. Thunder Force III would end up being a success, spawning an arcade port titled Thunder Force AC, which also got ported to the Super Nintendo Entertainment System as Thunder Spirits.
Since the game is rather generous with extra lives, less severe with its punishment on death, and has very strong weapons, Thunder Force III is a rather easy game to 1CC on default settings and doesn't need as much practice compared to other games in the series.
Contents
Gameplay Overview
Thunder Force III is similar to it's predecessor, which has a heavy focus on weapon usage and memorization. Enemies come in from all directions, which usually requires the correct weapon for the right scenario. Losing a life results in an instant respawn and the loss of the currently equipped weapon excluding the starting weapons (Unless the difficulty is on Mania, then all weapons are lost.)
Controls
The player controls the Fire LEO-03 "Styx", which has the ability to change between four levels of speed and cycle up to 5 weapon slots.
- A: Speed Change. The Styx can cycle between four different levels of speed which starts from slowest to fastest, starting from the slowest again after reaching the fastest.
- B: Fire Button. The game has a built-in autofire.
- C: Weapon Select. The next available weapon in the weapon bar is selected, reverting to the first weapon after reaching the end.
Weapons & Items
- Damage: 6 per bullet.
- Damage: 6 per bullet.
- Damage: 6 per segment, 36 total per beam.
- Damage: 9 per bullet.
- Damage: 6 per segment.
- Damage: 18 per missile, 6 per bullet, 12 per CLAW wave.
- Damage: 3 per missile.
WIP
WIP
Extra Lives
Score based extra lives are earned at 20,000, 50,000, then every other 50,000 points. Extra lives can also be found as an item picked up throughout the game.
Rank
Unknown. Add details here.
Stages
The player can choose which stage to start on. The stages the proceed in a clockwise order around the stage select screen.
- Hydra
- Gorgon
- Seiren
- Haides
- Ellis
When all five initial stages are complete, the player proceeds to the final stages in the following order:
- Cerberus
- Orn Base
- Orn Core
Scoring
Add details here.
Strategy
See (Template Page)/Strategy for stage maps, enemy and boss descriptions, walkthroughs, and advanced play strategies.
This section details some particular strategic information about the game and its gameplay, such as hidden 1UPs and some basic scoring tricks. For anything particularly deep or highly complex, you can probably leave it in the Strategy page.
(Currently evaluating whether or not this specific section should even include information outside of the separated Strategy pages. Worth thinking about as a community.)
Story
Basic story breakdowns, plot information, and endings are included here.
If there is no story at all, or any information about the setting, then this section can be omitted. Try to include at least small things here when you can.
Development History
If available, you can include information here about the hardware, the development of the game, and its general reception. Try to have as much information in this section cited as possible.
Version Differences
- Include information here about differences in a game between various versions. This includes regional differences, patch updates/bugfixes, and the like.
Trivia
- Cool facts and random tidbits go here!
Gallery
See (Template Page)/Gallery for our collection of images and scans for the game.
