SONIC & KNUCKLES
Platform: Sega Genesis
Publisher: Sega
Remember I said Nintendo is winning the console war? Well, they are, but not for lack of effort on Sega’s part.
Sonic & Knuckles is the latest Sonic game, following up on
Sonic 3. Remember
Sonic 3’s ad campaign, and the big deal about the new character, Knuckles the Echidna, who turned out to barely be in it? Well, this time he’s playable. I don’t know what Sega was thinking with the way they handled that, but now that he’s here I can forgive them. Like Tails, he’s not as fast as Sonic, but he has a unique movement mode—while Tails was finally given the ability to fly in Sonic 3, here Knuckles can climb walls. The Sonic series’ll stay great for a long time if they can keep adding new characters as fun as these.
But Knuckles himself isn’t the game’s only draw. The
S&K cartridge flips open at the top, and you can plug
Sonic 2 or
Sonic 3 into it. With the former, this just lets you play through
Sonic 2 as Knuckles instead of Sonic or Tails (there are a lot of areas in
Sonic 2 that only Knuckles can reach; Sega must have been planning this for a long time), but with the latter, you gain access to both Knuckles as a playable character
and the game’s battery backup—if you beat
Sonic 3 in lock-on mode, the game keeps going all through
S&K, retaining the ability to save, and with a total of twice as many Chaos Emeralds to collect.
Sonic 3 & Knuckles, as it’s called, is a long, satisfying play experience, a quantum leap beyond previous Sonic games.
Lock-on cartridge technology is a great feature that adds value to the product for anyone who has an earlier Sonic game, and it’s this sort of technological adaptation that’ll ensure the cartridge always has a place in console gaming. Sony has its new console, the PlayStation, launching in Japan come Christmas, but can you pull these sort of tricks with CDs? I don’t think you can—CDs can’t even store game saves. Nintendo may have the lead, but I think Nintendo and Sega are going to stay on top of the console hierarchy for the foreseeable future.
Comments