Oh, that's interesting. The music in The General's Son has a noticeably... Sachen-esque quality to it, for lack of a better description. Very much unlike Buzz & Waldog or Metal Force... despite the fact that this one's from Daou as well...[/quote]
According to this (http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/korea/part1/company-daou.htm) The General's Son was developed in-house by Daou, but everything after 93 was outsourced to Open, that'd probably explain the difference.
- codeman38
- Jan 23 2011, 08:47:01 PM
Oh, that's interesting. The music in The General's Son (http://cafe.naver.com/tekkenspecial.cafe?iframe_url=/ArticleRead.nhn%3Fclubid=10163817%26articleid=121%26referrerAllArticles=true) has a noticeably... Sachen-esque quality to it, for lack of a better description. Very much unlike Buzz & Waldog or Metal Force... despite the fact that this one's from Daou as well...[/quote]I'm not too sure about that myself. To me, it seems a bit primitive when compared with Sachen's 1992 releases. What I find slightly odd is that there was originally planned to be a US release called Street Hero, and of course Sachen made Street Heroes about 2 years later. I assume the game was made in-house though, although Dooly Bravo Land looks somewhat better in terms of quality.
What I personally don't get is why the Master System version of The General's Son seems to be completely different to the Famicom version when they're by the same company. (Then again, the NES version of Ninja Gaiden is completely different to the other versions)