Blandia


Blandia is a 1992 one-on-one, weapon-based fighting arcade game developed and published by Allumer. It is the sequel to the 1986 video game, Gladiator. Along with Strata's Time Killers, Blandia is one of the earliest weapon-based fighting games modeled after its competitor Capcom's 1991 video game or gaming hit Street Fighter II, but later became overshadowed by the success of SNK's 1993 weapon-based fighting video game, Samurai Shodown. Unusual for games, the entire female side breast including nipples are visible in some parts of the game such as in the game's intro and title screen.

Plot

The plot of Blandia takes place five years after Gladiator. In the Great Continent of Eurasia, after the great swordsman Gurianos downed the devilish warrior Gildus, peace returned to Eurasia and its people completely forgotten the darkness sealed by the evil spirit. Five years later, while living in the interior of Eurasia, Guarianos learns from a passing fencer that Gildus has been resurrected. Gurianos once again hits the road to the Golden Castle to find out the truth.

Gameplay

Blandia dismisses the side-scrolling feature of its predecessor, but kept its versus segments while including elements of other 2D versus fighting games released at the time, which the player's chosen character fights against his or her opponent in best two-out-of-three matches in a single player tournament mode with the computer or against another human player. Unlike most other similar fighting games at the time, Blandia was one of the first fighting games that combines the style of Capcom's Street Fighter II with the use of weapons in every character. Another unique feature it has is the ability to cause visible damage to the armors of the characters, originally used in Gladiator. However, unlike Gladiator, Blandia requires players to attack at the uncovered parts of the opponent's body multiple times to defeat him or her, instead of one hit like in Gladiator.
In one-player mode, the player must choose one of the "Original Six Warriors" to control. Instead of fighting other characters in a random order like in most fighting games back then, the player will move the sword-shaped cursor on a map to choose any region one of the other characters are inside of, fight against them in each battle and then advance to the Golden Castle. In both one-player and two-player modes, each round is five minutes long, and if neither of the characters are knocked out before the time runs out, the one with the most health wins the round; however, if both lifebars are even, the players must fight in a rematch. If both lifebars are even in the rematch, the fight ends with a game over.

Characters

Blandia was later ported by Ving to two home computers exclusively in Japan: the FM Towns on September 30, 1994, and the NEC PC-9821 on June 22, 1995. Compared to the original arcade version, the FM Towns version features an extended, less-repetitive soundtrack plus some exclusive tracks that include a vocal one; however, it also has a smaller screen. The PC-9821 version was titled Blandia 98 and has a wider screen than the FM Towns version.