Justice
League: Task Force
STORY:
Darkseid
attacks the planet Earth, destroying a military base in the process. A
member of the Justice League (that the player chooses to play as) tracks
down the other members for information and aid only be to attacked by those
heroes in their related locations. As the hero defeats the other JL members,
they deduce that the others aren't the real leaguers. Coming to this conclusion,
the hero battles Cheetah and then Despero for more information. They both
lead the hero to Darkseid, who then forces the hero to fight their android
clone. Upon defeating the clone, the hero must face Darkseid himself. After
the hero defeats him, the other League members are freed, and the military
base is restored.
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Justice
League: Task Force character select screen.
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REVIEW: Justice
League: Task Force is a 2D fighting game produced by Sunsoft and distributed
by Acclaim for SNES and Sega Genesis. Justice League: Task Force features
9 playable characters from
DC Comics' Justice League universe. Clearly, the game was designed as an
attempt to cash in on Street Fighter 2's and Mortal Kombat's
massive success at arcades and home consoles. If you want my opinion, this title
falls short in the graphics department and very short in
the gameplay department.
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If you
think this looks "good" I've got two words for ya... STREET
FIGHTER.
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Not only are
the graphics bland and mostly unimpressive for a console video game in
1995 (not to mention the arcade scene's capabilities), but the boring and basic gameplay is
super clunky and unresponsive compared to modern fighting games. Character special moves and priority
attacks severely lack "oomph" and animation. They need more frames!
In fact, if the award for "worst 2D animation" was to be given out
to a "big name" video game title in 1995... Justice League: Task
Force would be in the running (if not take the cake). In fairness, the
characters look decent in still frame but in motion look pretty lame.
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Get
ready for mirror matches... because this roster is small.
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Gameplay-wise, was the game fun? Not unless
you were easily amused by spandex wearing humans.
For one, the small number of moves each character can perform definitely hinders
the game's fun. Justice League: Task Force
wasn't fun to me because I was elaborately enjoying and learning many many
other fighting games in 1995. Does this game stand up to Capcom, SNK, or
Midway's quality at the time? NOT EVEN CLOSE.
To any experienced fighting game player in 1995 who knew what's what, Task
Force no doubt was mostly a disappointment on all levels (or they simply
didn't care about the game at all). The backgrounds and sound effects / music aren't as terrible as the
game itself, but the halfway-decent presentation isn't enough to save this game.
Finally... the character roster, clearly aiming to make a quick buck using DC's
highest profile comic book stars, is also smaller than that of most
modern fighting games in '95. Hard pass from me.
FUN
FACT: Additional Justice
League members such as Martian
Manhunter, Fire, and Shrapnel were planned to appear in Justice League:
Task Force but were omitted due to memory limitations on Super Nintendo
and Sega Genesis.
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Page Updated: |
January
19th, 2023 |
Developer(s): |
Sunsoft
Blizzard Entertainment
SNES
Condor Inc.
Genesis |
Publisher(s): |
Acclaim |
Platform(s): |
Super
Nintendo, Sega Genesis / Mega Drive
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Release Date(s): |
1995
/
SNES / Genesis
Oct. 27th, 1995
SNES
Sept. 1st, 1995
Genesis
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Characters: |
Superman,
Batman,
The
Flash, Wonder Woman,
Green Arrow, Aquaman,
Cheetah,
Despero,
Darkseid
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Featured Video:
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Related Games: |
Injustice: Gods Among Us,
Injustice 2, Mortal
Kombat Vs. DC Universe, The King of Fighters '95,
Darkstalkers 2, Fatal
Fury 3, Street Fighter Alpha, Marvel
Super Heroes, Mortal Kombat 3, Killer
Instinct 2, Super Street Fighter 2,
TMNT: Tournament Fighters,
WeaponLord, Power
Instinct, X-Men: Children of the Atom, Galaxy
Fight, Tatsunoko Fight |
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Gameplay
Engine
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2.0 / 10
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Story
/ Theme
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5.0 / 10
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Overall
Graphics
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3.5 / 10
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Animation
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2.5 / 10
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Music
/ Sound Effects
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4.0 / 10
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Innovation
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2.0 / 10
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Art Direction
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2.5 / 10
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Customization
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2.0 / 10
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Options / Extras
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2.0 / 10
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Intro / Presentation
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3.5 / 10
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Replayability / Fun
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1.5 / 10
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"Ouch" Factor
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2.0 / 10
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Characters
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5.0 / 10
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BOTTOM LINE
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2.5
/
10
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Review based on SNES version
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Final
Words: |
Justice League: Task Force can
indeed be
written off as just another "me too 2D fighting game of 90's". It
wasn't good, but might've entertained some easily-entertained folk, and that's
fine I guess. However, any seasoned fighting game player in 1995 would've
flushed this one quick (or better yet, not bothered to play it at all). They didn't have
this
game at the arcades... because if they did, NOBODY would be playing it
and it would've been a financial failure.
No doubt, there were far more significant and high-quality fighting games available on the SNES &
Genesis in 1995 (not to mention even better ones at arcades). Personally, after playing X-Men:
Children of the Atom in the arcade for almost a year, a game that looked
and animated like Justice League:
Task Force just wasn't acceptable!
As it turns out, slapping Batman and Superman on the
cover of a sloppily made fighting game probably managed to help this game sell a
few copies... but this game also ended up overloading the crowded bargain bins
of the 90s and nobody actually wanted to play it.
~TFG Webmaster |
@Fighters_Gen
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