In between famous ’80s JRPGs, Falcom made a shmup that broke all the rules

Pasokon Retro (opens in new tab) is our regular look back at the early years of Japanese PC gaming, encompassing everything from specialist 80’s computers to the happy days of Windows XP.

Developer: Nihon Falcom Released: 1989 
Japanese PCs: PC-88, PC-98, X68000 port (Image credit: Falcom, via Retroplace)
(Image credit: Retroplace / Nihon Falcom)

We made ‘STAR TRADER’ because We were interested in exploring this theme further” states the oddly capitalized cover of the otherwise entirely Japanese manual for Falcom’s 1989 adventure-shmup hybrid. No further explanation of this straightforward sentence is given—apparently Falcom thought that it was all the justification needed, even though it had spent the decade building a reputation on RPGs filled with heroes and gods and little else. At the end of the ’80s Falcom wanted to do something different from Ys and Dragon Slayer, so it just did, simple as that.

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