Rayman (video game)
Rayman | |
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Developer(s) | Ubi Pictures |
Publisher(s) | Ubi Soft |
Director(s) | Agnès Haegel |
Producer(s) | Gérard Guillemot |
Designer(s) |
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Programmer(s) |
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Artist(s) |
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Composer(s) |
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Series | Rayman |
Platform(s) | |
Release | 1 September 1995 |
Genre(s) | Platformer |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Rayman is a 1995 platform video game developed by Ubi Pictures and published by Ubi Soft. The player controls Rayman, who must pursue Mr Dark to recover the Great Protoon that used to keep the balance between nature and the people of Rayman's valley. The player must navigate the valley, defeat enemies with abilities gained throughout the game, and free captured Electoons, also encountering a boss at the end of each thematic world.
Michel Ancel conceived Rayman as a teenager and was able to realise the concept after being hired by Ubi Soft in 1989. He initially targeted the Atari ST and then the Super NES CD-ROM but restarted the development for the Atari Jaguar after the Super NES CD-ROM's cancellation. Ancel incorporated several childhood memories into the design and was soon joined by a larger development team. Ubi Soft made Rayman a launch title for the PlayStation in North American and Europe to compete with Japanese platform games on the platform.
Rayman was first released for the Atari Jaguar on 1 September 1995, followed shortly by versions for the PlayStation, the Sega Saturn, and MS-DOS. The game was met with a positive reception, with praise going towards its atmosphere, visuals, and soundtrack composed mainly by Rémi Gazel. Some reviewers warned that the game's aesthetic belied its high difficulty level and others criticised its lack of interest and excitement. Rayman became one of the best-selling PlayStation games and would become the first entry in the Rayman series.
Gameplay
[edit]Rayman is a side-scrolling platformer.[1] The player controls Rayman, who must navigate six thematic worlds. Each level hides six cages of captured Electoons that Rayman can free. Additionally, he can collect blue crystals, "Tings", and gain an extra life whenever he has obtained 100 of them.[15] If the player loses their five lives, they would need to load their save file or restart the game.[16] Rayman occasionally gains new powers, including the ability to fly, run, and hang from platforms. Modifications to his detached hands include grabbing and punching distant entities, the latter known as the "telescopic fist".[17][18]
A boss must be defeated at the end of each world, requiring the use of the previously gained abilities.[16] Rescuing all Electoons in the first five worlds grants Rayman access to the final world, the Candy Château, the hideout of the final boss, Mr Dark.[15] When Rayman interacts with the Magician, who is hidden in various levels, he can access hidden rooms that grant him Tings or extra lives if beaten in a given time.[19]
Plot
[edit]Rayman lives in a valley that, thanks to a magical orb known as the Great Protoon, has the people and nature living in harmony. One day, Mr Dark steals the Great Protoon and defeats its guardian, Betilla the Fairy. As a result, the Electoons that used to orbit the Great Protoon scatter and many are imprisoned by villains that appear in the Great Protoon's absence. Upon Betilla's request, Rayman sets out to recover the Great Protoon and free the captured Electoons. Mr Dark observes as Betilla guides Rayman though his quest and eventually kidnaps her. Rayman, having retrieved all Electoons, confronts Mr Dark in the Candy Château. However, Mr Dark takes away Rayman's telescopic fist and traps between walls of fire that close in on him. Electoons return Rayman's fist at the last moment, such that he can defeat Mr Dark and retrieve the Great Protoon. In the epilogue, Rayman takes a vacation with his friends and former enemies.
Development and release
[edit]Early concepts and design
[edit]Rayman was created by French the video game designer Michel Ancel. He conceived the character as a teenager in the 1980s, when he was learning to draw, compose music, and program to pursue his dream of making video games.[20] In 1988, his animation skills led him to be one of the early hires for the nascent publisher Ubi Soft, which at the time was operating with from Montreuil with six developers. One of Ubi Soft's founders, Yves Guillemot, encouraged Ancel to pitch game idea to the company leadership.[21] He worked one his own developing a game prototype based on his concept of Rayman for the Atari ST, including six months spent on building an animation system.[20][21] He teamed up with Frédéric Houde and, during a meeting with Serge Hascoët, Gérard Guillemot, Michel Guillemot, and Yves Guillemot, the duo pitched their idea using "a picture of a big, giant trombone and you had to imagine the player inside". Although the presented technology was in its research-and-development stage, Hascoët pushed for the game to enter into production, which Michel Guillemot agreed to take on.[21]
Rayman was greenlit in 1992, and Michel Guillemot gave Ancel and his team artistic freedom.[21] The game's style was inspired by Celtic, Chinese, and Russian fairy tales, as well as Ancel's childhood, having spent a lot of time by rivers, chasing insects, and climbing trees. When Ancel started work on the game, he began with trees and creature designs.[20] Having become interested in rendering tools such as Autodesk 3ds Max, he chose to incorporate 60 Hz animations. Houde considered this impressive for a time where most games used sprites animated at five frames per second. The Rayman character was named after the ray tracing rendering technique.[22][23]
Before embarking on the creation of the settings, characters and animations, Ancel and Houde recruited the illustrator Eric Pelatan and the artist Alexandra Steible. The latter came from an animation studio and was tasked with drawing rough templates of animations and later study the results for them to be digitised.[24][3] Ancel initially envisioned a game revolving around the human boy Jimmy, who creates the online world Hereitscool. After it becomes infected with a virus, Jimmy travels into the world and inhabits the body of his in-game avatar, Rayman, to defeat it. This idea was later scrapped.[25] Ancel defined his intent as seeking "a colourful platform game with breathtaking graphics, concrete animations, fantasy, humour and, above all, great playability". During development, four people worked on each world and the synchronisation of Rayman's attitudes.[3]
Production and release
[edit]When Ancel noticed the waning public interest in the Atari ST, he pivoted the development towards the Super NES CD-ROM, a peripheral for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. When Nintendo cancelled the peripheral in 1993, that version of Rayman was also scrapped.[20][26] It was considered lost media until rediscovered a copy dated 1992 in October 2016.[27][28] With his permission, the programmer Omar Cornut released it online in July 2017.[29]
Michel Guillemot eventually assigned additional developers onto the project and allocated 15 million francs for its development.[23] The production became split between two locations: While Ubi Soft's Montreuil headquarters continued to work on technical tasks, the creative team around Ancel and Houde worked from Ancel's hometown, Montpellier. The project's headcount grew to 100 people.[21] The team moved the production over to the Atari Jaguar, a console they felt could handle the graphics they aimed for.[20] Later, they decided to also bring the game to the PlayStation and the Sega Saturn due to their more capable hardware.[14][30] Ubi Soft made Rayman a launch title for the North American and European releases of the PlayStation, seeking to outclass competing platformers from Japan by releasing it simultaneously with a new a powerful system.[20][21]
Rayman on the Jaguar was first displayed at the 1994 Summer Consumer Electronics Show.[31][32] In late 1994, magazine advertisements announced Rayman as a title for the Atari Jaguar with a release in the fall[33] or by December 1994.[34] Pre-release promos of the PlayStation had advertised a release date of Rayman on 13 January 1995 in Japan.[35] Later, Japanese magazines stated a release date for the PlayStation version as being June 1995.[36] Similarly, American magazines reported a Jaguar release by June 1995, as well as versions for the 32X and 3DO, both of which were cancelled.[37]
Rayman was released on 1 September 1995 for the Atari Jaguar in Europe and on 9 September 1995 for North America.[2][1] During September, it was published for the PlayStation,[4][3] and in November for the Sega Saturn.[5] A version for MS-DOS was released in December 1995 in Europe and in North American in April 1996.[7][6] Also in April 1996, a preview demo featuring the first of six worlds in the game was released for the PlayStation and Sega Saturn.[38]
Reception
[edit]Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
GameRankings | GBA: 85%[39] GBC: 79%[40] |
Metacritic | GBA: 84/100[41] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
AllGame | JAG: 4.5/5[51] GBC: 4.5/5[52] SAT: 3.5/5[53] |
Electronic Gaming Monthly | PS: 8.625/10[42] JAG: 8/10[43] |
Famitsu | SAT: 29/40[44] PS: 27/40[45] GB: 26/40[46] |
GameSpot | 7.4/10[17] |
Next Generation | PS: 4/5[47] JAG: 4/5[48] PC: 3/5[49] GBA: 4/5[50] |
TouchArcade | 3/5[13] |
Sega Saturn Magazine | 78%[5] |
CD Player | 8/10[54] |
Publication | Award |
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Electronic Gaming Monthly | Game of the Month[42] |
Rayman received a generally positive reception upon release, with critics praising its animations, atmosphere, and soundtrack. Eurogamer felt there was "no shame in admitting" that it was reviewed favourably.[55] Tommy Glide of GamePro described the game as one of the best for the Atari Jaguar and commended it as a showcase of the console's capabilities, although he considered it inferior to the PlayStation version.[56] Electronic Gaming Monthly similarly wrote that the Atari Jaguar version was an outstanding platformer but paled against the PlayStation version due to the lower audio quality and slow responsiveness of the controls.[43] Glide appreciated the precise controls on account of the constant jumping, ducking, and dodging involved in the gameplay.[56] Captain Squideo, also of GamePro, commented that the PlayStation version was a "dazzling delight" and proclaimed it to be one of the most visually appealing games at the time.[57]
Next Generation, while noting a lack of original gameplay elements, believed the game set itself apart from many other platform games and had a true sense of depth and playability.[47] The Entertainment Weekly writer Bob Strauss felt that the game may be the one that "ennobles the adolescent world of video games" and the likes of Disney animated films like Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Strauss exclaimed that the game was a must-have for those with a fifth-generation video game console.[58] Many reviewers commented on the contrast of the game's difficult gameplay to its innocent visual presentation.[43] Sam Hickman of Sega Saturn Magazine criticised the Sega Saturn version because of what he considered an overabundance of levels that played similarly with only varied attacks or an increased difficulty used as differentiation. Hence, he regared the game "a bit too dull a bit too often", while also being "plain irritating and damned difficult" on occasion.[5]
Reviewers raised differing opinions on the game's graphics. The GameSpot writer Jeff Sengstack compared the game to Donkey Kong Country or Pitfall! and considered it to feature "wonderfully clever gaming elements, engaging and humorous characters, terrific music, and heaps of whimsy", although he faulted the lack of frequent save points.[17] Lawrence Neves of GamePro felt it was what players wanted for the Sega Saturn and compared it favourably to previous platformers, such as Bug! and Astal. He noted that, while the graphics and music seemed childish at times, the challenge targeted experienced players. Neves regarded the lush visuals as impeccable and made particular note of the version's level transition effects.[59] Next Generation praised the game's graphics, optimisation, challenge variety, and charming player character, and said the game made a good change of pace from other PC releases.[49] The magazine considered the Atari Jaguar version impeccable, saying that "with its vast color palette, detailed sound effects, and overall playability, there is nothing about Rayman for the Jaguar that falls below the mark of excellent".[48]
Sales
[edit]By the end of 1995, 400,000 copies of Rayman had been sold in Europe.[23] The game sold 900,000 copies globally by 1997.[60] It was the all-time best-selling PlayStation game in the United Kingdom,[55] while in France it had sold 670,000 copies by 2000, becoming the second-best-selling game on the platform in the country.[61] Total sales in the United States numbered 357,000.[62] According to Gamasutra, Rayman Advance's sales neared 600,000 units during the first half of the 2001–2002 fiscal year alone and then reached 770,000 copies by the end of March 2002.[63][64]
Legacy
[edit]The commercial success of Rayman established a successful franchise with several sequels, including Rayman 2: The Great Escape (1999), and some of the game's elements influenced Rayman Origins.[20] Its also established itself as Ubisoft's first legitimate successful game and empowered the company to go public in 1996 to raise more capital for its internal development efforts.[21] Ancel was honoured by the French government for his work in 2006.[65] The character Rayman became a recognisable character after the game's release, especially his popularity surviving the transition to next-generation consoles, and was once considered to become the mascot character for the Atari Jaguar.[66]
Rayman was brought to the Game Boy Color in early 2000,[67][8] to Palm OS in September 2001,[11] to the Nintendo DSi in December 2009,[12] and to iOS in February 2016.[13] Rayman Advance, a variant for the Game Boy Advance developed by Digital Eclipse, was released in June 2001.[10][9] Next Generation noted that the game remained largely the same as the original and lauded its graphics, music, and controls.[50] Eurogamer writer Martin Taylor considered it "a stunning looker, and possibly one of the best looking GBA games available at the moment".[68] The game is one of twenty titles included with the PlayStation Classic, a miniature PlayStation replica released in December 2018.[69]
Fan remake
[edit]Rayman Redemption, a fan remake by the Finnish developer Ryemanni, features additional worlds, levels, and minigames.[70] It was released for free via Game Jolt for Rayman's 25th anniversary.[71] It received praise from reviewers, with PC Gamer and Kotaku highlighting that the game has an option for casual and masocore players, something they considered a fortune for players traumatised by the original game's difficulty. Kotaku also commended the added content.[71][70] Retronauts writer Stuart Gipp wrote that at first, the game was very impressive, especially being compared to Alex Kidd in Miracle World DX and Sonic Mania. He then criticized how its characteristics and oddities that's have been toned down were what gave the original game most of its identity and memorable content.[72]
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Bibliography
[edit]- Ubisoft (1995). Rayman (PDF). pp. 5–20.
- Dale, Laura Kate (2021). Things I Learned from Mario's Butt. Unbound. ISBN 978-1-783-52891-2.
- Blanchet, Alexis (2015). Wolf, Mark J.P. (ed.). Video Games Around the World. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-52716-3.
External links
[edit]- 1995 video games
- Android (operating system) games
- Atari Jaguar games
- Cancelled 3DO Interactive Multiplayer games
- Cancelled Sega 32X games
- Cancelled Super Nintendo Entertainment System games
- Digital Eclipse games
- DOS games
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- Game Boy Advance games
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- Games commercially released with DOSBox
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