Panza Kick Boxing
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''Panza Kick Boxing'' is a French
fighting video game The fighting game video game genre, genre involves combat between multiple characters, often (but not limited to) one-on-one battles. Fighting game combat often features mechanics such as Blocking (martial arts), blocking, grappling, counter- ...
developed by Futura and originally published by
Loriciel Loriciel (also sometimes Loriciels) was a French video game developing company that was active from 1983 to the early 1990s. The name is a combination of ''logiciel'', the French word for software, and ''Oric'', the first computer they wrote so ...
s in 1991. The game is a video game adaptation of Thai kick boxing. It received high critical praise particularly for its graphics and gameplay while receiving minor criticism for its repetitiveness. A sequel with various names to distance from the Panza endorsement, including '' Best of the Best: Championship Karate'' in the United States, was released a few years later.


Plot and gameplay

The player controls a kick boxer who fights their way up the league table defeating opponents, while their ultimate goal is to challenge the Champion André Panza and take his title. The Gymnasium section allows the player to train their character to improve one of three skills - strength, resistance, and reflex - which will improve their performance in future fights. The game contains a total of 56 kicks and punches, which players can assign to one of the 8 joystick movements to customise their boxer's fighting style. Moves inspired by real-life kick boxing include long sweeps, short jabs, and crunching kicks. The two boxers are viewed from ring level, and a referee is present to call 'break' or count you out; each bout takes at least three rounds and each round ends either when a boxer is KO-ed or the timer runs out. A row of lights above the ring are a visual cue to how close the player is to losing, which extinguish as they are hit.


Development and release

The game was developed by Futura. It was endorsed by French kickboxing then-champion André Panza ( fr), who also supplied technical advice. It contains realistic attacking and defensive moves, and around 600 frames of animation. ''Panza Kick Boxing'' was originally published by
Loriciel Loriciel (also sometimes Loriciels) was a French video game developing company that was active from 1983 to the early 1990s. The name is a combination of ''logiciel'', the French word for software, and ''Oric'', the first computer they wrote so ...
s in France in 1991, and subsequently by NEC Technologies in the United States and
Kixx Kixx may refer to: * Kixx (U.S. Gold), a defunct budget video game label associated with former publisher U.S. Gold * KIXX, a radio station broadcasting a Hot AC format serving the Watertown, South Dakota, USA area * Philadelphia KiXX, an America ...
(the budget range of
U.S. Gold U.S. Gold Limited was a British video game publisher based in Witton, Birmingham, England. The company was founded in 1984 by Anne and Geoff Brown in parallel to their distributor firm, CentreSoft, both of which became part of Woodward Brown H ...
) in the United Kingdom, Germany, and Italy. The game was a new venture for NEC, which has previously built a business off their TV Sports series of events. Additionally, the game was published on the
TurboGrafx-16 The TurboGrafx-16, known in Japan as the , is a home video game console developed by Hudson Soft and manufactured by NEC. It was released in Japan in 1987 and in North America in 1989. The first console of the fourth generation of video game con ...
by Turbo Technologies, a joint venture by NEC and
Hudson Soft was a Japanese video game company known for releasing numerous titles across video game consoles, home computers, and mobile phones. Headquartered in the Midtown Tower in Tokyo, it also maintained an office in the Hudson Building in Sapporo. F ...
.


Reception

''
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and
TurboPlay ''TurboPlay Magazine'' is a bi-monthly, U.S.-based video game magazine which was published by L.F.P. from June/July 1990 through August/September 1992. It was available via subscription only (US$9.95 per year). A total of 14 issues were release ...
'' described it as "tremendous" and "fantastic" respectively, while ''
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'' deemed it "extremely good". Adam Smith from ''
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'' praised the animations for the referee. ''Games Village'' called it "one of the best Kickboxing simulators ever produced in history". Mixed reviews were offered by reviewers like Tony Horgan of ''
Amiga User International ''Amiga User International'' (or ''AUI'') was a monthly computer magazine published in its later years by AUI Limited, it was the first dedicated Amiga magazine in Europe and in comparison to other Amiga magazines, AUI had a more serious persp ...
'' who criticised the game's repetitiveness which he argued is standard for this genre. Italian site ''Games Village'' discussed how the "modest...pixel portrait of the solemn André Panza" on the cover juxtaposed the quality of the game in a larger discussion about how "the palatability of a video game is not necessarily linked to the actual value of its gameplay, nor to its technical prowess". Commenting on the contemporary context in which the game was developed, ''
TurboPlay ''TurboPlay Magazine'' is a bi-monthly, U.S.-based video game magazine which was published by L.F.P. from June/July 1990 through August/September 1992. It was available via subscription only (US$9.95 per year). A total of 14 issues were release ...
'' suggested that with '' Champions Forever Boxing'' (1991) and ''Panza Kick Boxing'' saturating the
TurboGrafx-16 The TurboGrafx-16, known in Japan as the , is a home video game console developed by Hudson Soft and manufactured by NEC. It was released in Japan in 1987 and in North America in 1989. The first console of the fourth generation of video game con ...
market, it was unlikely for Cinemaware to release their '' TV Sports Boxing'' on the platform.


Legacy

A 1992 sequel was announced in October 1992 tentatively titled ''Panza Kick Boxing 2''. The game, closer in design to a re-release, was published in Japan as ''The Kick Boxing'' (Micro World) and ''Super Kickboxing'' (Electro Brain) as Panza was unknown in the country. This updated version was later imported in the United States by
Electro Brain Electro Brain was a North American video game publisher based in Salt Lake City, Utah Utah is a landlocked state in the Mountain states, Mountain West subregion of the Western United States. It is one of the Four Corners states, sharing ...
as '' Best of the Best: Championship Karate'' in July 1993. The game has also been subtitled ''Panza Gold Edition''. '' Amiga Joker'' noted that while the gameplay, graphics, sound and options screen had been updated from the original, "apart from the title there are only a few real innovations", describing it as a "deceptive package"''.'' ''
MegaTech ''MegaTech'' (sometimes styled with the katakana メガテケ) was a publication from EMAP aimed specifically at the Sega Mega Drive gaming market. The magazine was started in 1991. The launch editorial consisted of a small team including Pa ...
'' suggested the latter title was an effort to tie the game to the 1989 martial arts film ''Best of the Best''. ''
Sega Zone ''Sega Zone'' was a Sega orientated publication from Dennis Publishing in the early 1990s. ''Sega Zone'' had split off from the former multiformat console title ''Game Zone'', which continued as a Nintendo magazine. Early Dennis Publishing st ...
'' described it as "one of the most differingly-named icgames in the history of gaming". ''The Australian Commodore and Amiga Review'' noted that while the game is officially a sequel, it's "almost a reproduction". In contrast to the original, this version received a mixed reception in Europe, and Asia. However, actor and martial artist
Ron Yuan Ronald Yuan is an American actor, martial artist, director, and stunt choreographer. He is best known for his roles on ''Sons of Anarchy'', ''Prison Break'', '' Golden Boy'', and '' CSI: NY''. He has acted in numerous films, including an ensembl ...
deemed it the "best SNES fighting game from a purely technical martial arts point of view", while Brazilian magazine ''
Ação Games ''Ação Games'' was a Brazilian magazine specialized in video games that circulated from 1991 to 2002. History Released as a special edition of the sports magazine ''A Semana em Ação'', which replaced ''Placar'' at Editora Abril in August 19 ...
'' described it as "one of the best games of the genre" and one that fans of
Luta Livre Luta Livre (, lit. ''freestyle fighting'' or ''wrestling''), known in Brazil as Luta Livre Brasileira (lit. ''Brazilian freestyle fighting'') or Luta Livre Submission, and also Brazilian Submission Wrestling, is a Brazilian martial arts and comb ...
would enjoy. ''Super Action'' further deemed it "classic kick boxing action".


Notes


References


External links

*{{moby game, id=/12587/panza-kick-boxing
''Panza Kick Boxing''
at the Hall of Light
Japanese ''The Kick Boxing'' manual
1990 video games Amiga games Amstrad CPC games Atari ST games DOS games Kickboxing Loriciel games Martial arts video games Turbo Technologies games TurboGrafx-16 games TurboGrafx-CD games Video games developed in France