Chakan: The Forever Man

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Chakan: The Forever Man
Developer(s)Extended Play Productions
Publisher(s)Sega
Designer(s)Jon Miller
Mark Miller
Platform(s)Sega Genesis
Game Gear
Release
  • NA: December 8, 1992
  • EU: 1992
Genre(s)2D action platformer
Mode(s)Single-player

Chakan: The Forever Man is a Sega Mega Drive, Sega Genesis and Game Gear video game published by Sega of America in 1992. The game featured an uncommonly dark premise for the time of its release, with it released in a time in which the home console market was flooded with licensed platformers based on family-friendly media such as the Mario and Sonic series.

It is based upon a comic book of the same name, written by Robert A. Kraus, and was produced by Ed Annunziata, who met Chakan's creator at a convention and was impressed. In addition to composing, Chakan is also composer Mark Miller's only work as a gameplay and level designer.

Gameplay[edit]

The player plays as Chakan, and starts the game in a central hub stage, from which they can select one of four elemental-based "planes" of Earth, Air, Fire and Water, each with three levels for a total of 12 levels. The player advances through each platforming level until completion or death, whereupon Chakan is returned to the hub to choose a new level on either the same or a different plane. The player has infinite lives, but will be returned to the hub if he is "killed". At the bottom of the screen, an hourglass indicates how much time the player has to complete all the levels in the plane. If time runs out, the player is returned to the hub and must restart the plane from its first level. Chakan starts out with his characteristic twin swords, but acquires a new weapon in the first stage of each element, such as the Grappling Hook which allows him to latch on to hooks and climb, and the Hammer which can break through certain walls. Chakan can also collect potions in each of the four elements, which he can combine and use to grant himself temporary powers such as enhancing his swords with elemental powers or increasing his jump height.

Upon defeating the three levels and the enemy bosses for each plane, Chakan clears the "terrestrial plane" and embarks upon a quest to defeat four "elemental planes of evil," each consisting of another three levels and a boss each for fire, earth, wind and water. These levels are considerably harder than the initial four sets of planes.

Plot[edit]

The game follows the tale of Chakan, a warrior who is so confident in his swordsmanship that he declares even Death cannot best him in battle. Death appears and challenges Chakan: if Chakan can defeat him, he will be granted eternal life. However, if Death wins, he will become Death's eternal servant. The battle rages on for several days until Chakan emerges as the victor. Death grants him his reward, but additionally condemns him to wander all of existence until all supernatural evil is destroyed.

After he has slain the supernatural evils of Earth, Chakan is shown stabbing himself with his sword in anticipation of his promised death. Death replies that every star in the universe contains a planet filled with supernatural evil, so Chakan's curse remains unlifted. The player is given a single attempt to defeat one such cosmic supernatural evil as a final boss in the game; if unsuccessful, Chakan states that "rest will come another day". If Chakan defeats the boss, an hourglass background used in the plot exposition screens appears without any text, and after fifteen minutes a single line of text appears saying "Not the end".

Reception[edit]

The game is known for its unusually high difficulty level for its time of release, but it, like many early 90s games, still retains a dedicated cult following.

Sega Pro magazine gave the game an overall score of 76/100, praising the game's graphics as "well animated sprites [and] the backgrounds are detailed and atmospheric" and the game music as "deep, booming and atmospheric", concluding, "This could've been a classic game based on a novel scenario, but it's let down by the complete lack of action."[4]

Mega Action gave the game an overall score of 88%, describing the game as an "excellent mix of cutesy and platform ingredients".[5]

Related games[edit]

A Game Gear game by the same name was published by Sega. It features very similar gameplay, but different level layouts and other changes to accommodate the weaker hardware. It does have a title screen synthesized voice: "Chakan, the Forever Man" which the Genesis version did not.

A sequel was planned and developed somewhat by Ed Annunziata's studio AndNow, but no new information about the project has been released since 2001. It was planned to be released for as many current platforms as possible, according to Ed Annunziata himself in an interview during May 2001.[6]

Some Legacy of Kain fans have claimed that much of the work on the Chakan sequel was later absorbed into the 2002 game Blood Omen 2, although this is unconfirmed and the only concrete link between the games is the presence of director Steve Ross. Ross and colleague Jon Miller both publicly attributed the similarities to a common look of Ross' work than any intentional reuse.[7][8][9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Knight, Kyle. "Chakan: The Forever Man Review". Allgame. Archived from the original on November 15, 2014. Retrieved May 7, 2022.
  2. ^ Chakan: The Forever Man. Paragon Publishing. March 1993. pp. 56–57.
  3. ^ "Mega Library". Mega Action (1): 65. June 1993. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  4. ^ Chakan: The Forever Man. Paragon Publishing. March 1993. pp. 56–57.
  5. ^ "Mega Library". Mega Action (1): 65. June 1993. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  6. ^ "AndNow Interview - Sega Scream". Archived from the original on 2016-03-08.
  7. ^ "Sega-16 – Behind the Design: Chakan the Forever Man".
  8. ^ "Chakan and Sirens - Blood Omen 2 - Legacy of Kain: The Lost Worlds".
  9. ^ "A Discussion With Jon Miller - Legacy of Kain Series - Legacy of Kain: The Lost Worlds".

External links[edit]