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In 2024 Japan, a group of teenage skaters (Groups collectively referred to as Rudies) called the GGs vie for control of the many districts of Tokyo against many rival groups. A mega corporate enterprise (the Rokkaku Group) has taken over the many districts of the city and their leader is now the mayor of Tokyo. It is oppressing the people, taking away freedom of speech and expression, and is forcing other gang members to give up their territory using the corrupt police force of Tokyo. |
In 2024 Japan, a group of teenage skaters (Groups collectively referred to as Rudies) called the GGs vie for control of the many districts of Tokyo against many rival groups. A mega corporate enterprise (the Rokkaku Group) has taken over the many districts of the city and their leader is now the mayor of Tokyo. It is oppressing the people, taking away freedom of speech and expression, and is forcing other gang members to give up their territory using the corrupt police force of Tokyo. |
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The game begins with the player in control of a character called Yoyo, who has to complete a set of basic training exercise to prove himself worthy of joining the GGs. After these challenges are completed, the game is interrupted by a pirate radio broadcast by 'DJ Professor K' who fills the player in on the turmoil within Tokyo. After this cutscene, the player is released into Tokyo itself, where they pursue their mission to 'bury Tokyo in graffiti' and fight the authoritarian Rokkaku Police. |
The game begins with the player in control of a character called Yoyo, who has to complete a set of basic training exercise to prove himself worthy of joining the GGs.<ref>{{cite web | title = Jet Set Radio Future :: Xbox Game Review | work = | publisher = Kidzworld | url = http://www.kidzworld.com/article/2435-jet-set-radio-future-xbox-game-review | accessdate = 2009-04-09}}</ref> After these challenges are completed, the game is interrupted by a pirate radio broadcast by 'DJ Professor K' who fills the player in on the turmoil within Tokyo. After this cutscene, the player is released into Tokyo itself, where they pursue their mission to 'bury Tokyo in graffiti' and fight the authoritarian Rokkaku Police. |
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== Music == |
== Music == |
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As shown below, the music of Jet Set Radio Future was very diverse and the playlist (for its time) was gigantic, much like its [[Sega Dreamcast]] predecessor: [[Jet Grind Radio]] (NTSC), [[Jet Set Radio]] (PAL). The music was played in a premixed format consisting of certain playlists directed to certain levels. The music was in stereo and was not interactive, although there is a jukebox and the end of the game features a song only available through the jukebox. Additionally, the soundtrack introduces artists that are either foreign, not found mainstream or work under gaming licenses such as [[Guitar Vader]], [[BS 2000]], [[Hideki Naganuma]], [[Scapegoat Wax]], The Latch Brothers (the side project of [[Mike D]] of the [[Beastie Boys]]), [[Cibo Matto]] and even [[The Prunes]]. |
As shown below, the music of Jet Set Radio Future was very diverse and the playlist (for its time) was gigantic, much like its [[Sega Dreamcast]] predecessor: [[Jet Grind Radio]] (NTSC), [[Jet Set Radio]] (PAL). The music was played in a premixed format consisting of certain playlists directed to certain levels. The music was in stereo and was not interactive, although there is a jukebox and the end of the game features a song only available through the jukebox. Additionally, the soundtrack introduces artists that are either foreign, not found mainstream or work under gaming licenses such as [[Guitar Vader]], [[BS 2000]], [[Hideki Naganuma]], [[Scapegoat Wax]], The Latch Brothers (the side project of [[Mike D]] of the [[Beastie Boys]]), [[Cibo Matto]] and even [[The Prunes]]. |
Revision as of 03:14, 10 April 2009
Jet Set Radio Future | |
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Developer(s) | Smilebit |
Publisher(s) | Sega |
Platform(s) | Xbox |
Genre(s) | Action, Racing, Platform, Adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Jet Set Radio Future (often abbreviated JSRF) is a video game developed by Smilebit and published by Sega. It was released on February 25, 2002 in the United States, near the beginning of the Xbox's lifespan. After the game's initial release, it was added alongside Sega GT 2002 onto a single disc and bundled with new Xbox systems.
Similar to the original, it depicts a future Tokyo where freedom of expression is outlawed. The user plays a character in the GG's, a gang of in-line skating graffiti artists who skate around Tokyo covering up rival gangs' graffiti, knocking over Rokkaku police, and dancing to the eclectic soundtrack. The game uses the cel-shaded style of animation, and has been widely acclaimed for its unique music stylings, detailed art, and fun gameplay.
Synopsis
In 2024 Japan, a group of teenage skaters (Groups collectively referred to as Rudies) called the GGs vie for control of the many districts of Tokyo against many rival groups. A mega corporate enterprise (the Rokkaku Group) has taken over the many districts of the city and their leader is now the mayor of Tokyo. It is oppressing the people, taking away freedom of speech and expression, and is forcing other gang members to give up their territory using the corrupt police force of Tokyo.
The game begins with the player in control of a character called Yoyo, who has to complete a set of basic training exercise to prove himself worthy of joining the GGs.[1] After these challenges are completed, the game is interrupted by a pirate radio broadcast by 'DJ Professor K' who fills the player in on the turmoil within Tokyo. After this cutscene, the player is released into Tokyo itself, where they pursue their mission to 'bury Tokyo in graffiti' and fight the authoritarian Rokkaku Police.
Music
As shown below, the music of Jet Set Radio Future was very diverse and the playlist (for its time) was gigantic, much like its Sega Dreamcast predecessor: Jet Grind Radio (NTSC), Jet Set Radio (PAL). The music was played in a premixed format consisting of certain playlists directed to certain levels. The music was in stereo and was not interactive, although there is a jukebox and the end of the game features a song only available through the jukebox. Additionally, the soundtrack introduces artists that are either foreign, not found mainstream or work under gaming licenses such as Guitar Vader, BS 2000, Hideki Naganuma, Scapegoat Wax, The Latch Brothers (the side project of Mike D of the Beastie Boys), Cibo Matto and even The Prunes. Also No Doubt, the group containing Gwen Stafani showed clips of the video game in their music video "Hella Good".
Characters
Jet Set Radio Future has 24 playable characters including several of whom were not featured in Jet Set Radio. Furthermore, many characters had their names changed when Sega localized the game for the American market.
- Beat
- Gum
- Corn (Tab)
- Yoyo
- Rhyth (Mew)
- Combo
- Cube
- Garam
- Soda (Slate)
- Boogie (Piranha)
- Jazz
- Clutch
- Zero Beat
- Doom Riders
- Rapid99
- AKUMU
- Immortals
- NT-3000
- Potts
- Noise Tank
- Poison Jam
- Love Shockers
- Rokkaku Gouji
- Roboy
Soundtrack
Soundtrack listing |
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(** Not included on the official "Jet Set Radio Future: Original Sound Track" CD available from Scitron Records but most can be found on the very hard-to-find "Jet Set Radio Future: Music Sampler" CD from Grand Royal Records) (*** Not included on either CD.) |
Xbox 360 backwards compatibility
On April 19, 2007, a backwards compatibility update from Microsoft allowed most users to play the game on the Xbox 360. However, this update did not enable compatibility with the Sega Bundled version (packaged on the same disc with Sega GT 2002), nor was there any PAL support.
Later, Microsoft released an update on July 12, 2007, fixing many of the bugs gamers had come across since the initial patch. The fix also enabled the owners of the bundled version and all PAL regions to play JSRF on their Xbox 360. However, the bundled PAL version will not work through a VGA cable, as the menu for selecting which game to play only works in 50Hz.
Inline Skating Culture
The game has several references to aggressive inline skating. Players can grind through rails and skate backwards. When a player is skating fast, he can come to a quick stop by performing an advanced inline-skating move called the powerslide. The game also shows animated skating dance moves when players are stopped and idle.
Reception
Aggregator | Score |
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GameRankings | 85.9% (based on 83 reviews) 7.7 (average vote) [4] |
Metacritic | 88 (based on 37 reviews)[5] |
Publication | Score |
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GameSpot | 8.7/10[3] |
IGN | 9.1/10[2] |
JSRF received critical acclaim, with high reviews in gaming websites and magazines. IGN gave the game a 9.1/10 and called it "one of the coolest titles around" but that it also fails to reach classic status because it was "not enough of a challenge."[2] GameSpot issued an 8.7/10 describing it as "one of the better Xbox games to date" and disagreeing with IGN, claimed the game "offered a serious challenge."[3] Despite positive reviews, this was not followed by high sales, landing it the title of the most unfairly ignored game in the OXM UK awards the year of its release.
References
- ^ "Jet Set Radio Future :: Xbox Game Review". Kidzworld. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
- ^ a b Goldstein, Hilary (February 22, 2002). "Jet Set Radio Future". IGN. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 2008-12-01.
- ^ a b Torres, Ricardo (February 25, 2002). "JSRF: Jet Set Radio Future Review". GameSpot. pp. 1–3. Retrieved 2008-12-01.
- ^ "Jet Set Radio Future - XBOX". Retrieved December 1 2008.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (help) - ^ http://www.metacritic.com/games/platforms/xbx/jetsetradiofuture
External links
- Jet Set Radio Future Official Website (No longer available)
- Jet Set Radio Future at MobyGames