Batman Forever

Batman Forever is a beat-em-up game for several consoles that was developed by Probe Entertainment and published by Acclaim in North America, Europe, and Japan, and Tectoy in Brazil. It was based on the 1995 superhero movie of the same name. While there existed an arcade game based on Batman Forever, this page will focus on the Mortal Kombat style game.

Plot
Batman and Robin must defeat Two-Face and the Riddler.

General

 * 1) The game uses the exact same engine as Mortal Kombat, with the same control scheme and moves. Because of this, the button combinations for doing anything other than using basic attacks to fight enemies are borderline ridiculous, and feel more suited for cheat codes. In the SNES version, for instance, to pull yourself up to certain areas with the grappling hook, you must press Select slightly before you press Up. To jump down from certain ledges, you press Down and R, but R must be held before pressing Down. If you press buttons at the same time, you just only jump or crouch. What's worse, basic attacks deal pathetic amounts of damage, essentially forcing the player to learn the button inputs for more complex attacks, combos, and gadgets.
 * 2) Fighting enemies becomes boring very fast because they have an absurd amount of health and there's almost zero variety in enemy types. Even the first enemies didn't have as much health.
 * 3) The underwhelming combat makes the game a chore to play.
 * 4) No continues, meaning a game over will force the player to restart from the beginning.
 * 5) There's no sense of reward when you beat the game.

SNES and Genesis versions

 * 1) The foreground objects can block your view of Batman/Robin and enemies.
 * 2) The graphics are okay, but the game is sometimes very dark and makes everything hard to see.
 * 3) The SNES version has load times despite being on a cartridge-based system (whenever you go to another area, it says "HOLD ON").
 * 4) Activating some switches are a bit of a problem because you'd expect kicking them activates them, but they're instead activated by your bombs.
 * 5) Awfully bland and dull soundtrack where a lot of the songs are forgettable.
 * 6) Weird digitized graphics on the character models.
 * 7) Moves such as the aforementioned grappling hook require you to stand in pixel-perfect locations in order to use them properly.
 * 8) Sometimes, there is just no sense of direction as to where you need to go next in the game. Compare it to the arcade game; that one is totally straightforward.
 * 9) If the time runs out in the third level, it's an immediate game over, regardless of how many lives the player had. On the upside, there are extra-time pickups.
 * 10) Robin controls slightly slower than Batman, which, coupled with the broken enemies and poor controls, means that playing as Robin makes the game even more frustrating and boring than it already is.
 * 11) False advertising: In the SNES version, to activate Batman's Cape Morph, you have to press Y repeatedly while holding L, while in the manual it says you have to press A repeatedly while holding L. Not only that but there are some fake screenshots and typos.

Game Boy and Game Gear versions

 * 1) The 8-bit versions lack graphical detail. Backgrounds and sprites have translated horribly during the transition from the console to 8-bit handhelds, especially on the Game Boy.
 * 2) The soundtrack is even worse than its 16-bit counterpart. The composition in particular is just droning and lifeless, with missing instruments due to the 16-bit to 8-bit transition.
 * 3) * For unknown reasons, a lot of songs were cut out in the process. Meaning, you'll hear the same two songs on every level.
 * 4) It only has four levels, with two sections per level. Half of the levels from the 16-bit version were cut out.
 * 5) Button combination for gadgets needed to beat the game isn't listed in the game's manual. Even the button combinations for the gadgets were listed in the 16-bit versions' manuals, albeit with typos.
 * 6) Controls were taken from Mortal Kombat (Game Boy), with the same input delay.
 * 7) Your grappling hook sometimes fails due to faulty controls. This makes the first level, Second Bank of Gotham, very difficult to complete.
 * 8) The "no sense of direction" flaw from the 16-bit versions is even worse. Sometimes clearing the area of enemies is the solution, other times it's not clear on what to do next.
 * 9) Finding secrets within the levels is more trouble than they are worth.

Redeeming Qualities

 * 1) Unlike the SNES version, the other versions don't have load times, even if the Mega Drive, Game Gear, and Game Boy versions are on cartridge-based systems.
 * 2) The soundtrack in the SNES and PC versions is pretty good and fits perfectly with the game's atmosphere.
 * 3) The front cover of the game box is pretty nice, showing Batman with all four other heroes in the moonlight with the shadow of a bat on the moon's shield.
 * 4) As mentioned in WISF SaGv#2, the graphics for the time were great and very detailed.
 * 5) The PC version has slightly better controls than the other versions.

Reception
The game's reception by gamers was quite polarizing. To most of the reception, the game has received negatively and is considered to be the worst SNES Batman game.

Trivia

 * The game was developed by Probe Entertainment, who developed the Sega Genesis port of Mortal Kombat would go on to develop mh:awesomegames: Die Hard Trilogy.

Videos
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