1/9/00 Version 1.0 By: Regdren Regdren@hotmail.com Welcome to my Giga Wings FAQ. I’m writing this FAQ in the hope that other, more experienced players of this game will see that even someone like me can make an FAQ, and post their own, more effective advice. I also hope that in the meantime, people who play this worthy shooting game will extend their life expectancy in the game by my advice. This is based on the assumption, of course, that those who are even less skilled at this game than I am are interested in it enough to look up this FAQ, so I hope that it is indeed the case. In case you haven’t already guessed, this is also my very first FAQ. Giga Wing is a vertical scrolling arcade shooter by Capcom that was recently released in my area. Where I live, it’s 50 cents a credit, which is a bit steep for a shooter in my opinion. However, it has a couple of innovations, as well as the ability to have ridiculous amounts of moving objects on the screen at once, as anyone who has played it will tell you. Table of contents: 1.Version history 2.Basic equipment that every plane has 3.Scoring Points 4.The planes 5.In-Game General Strategy 6.Stage and Boss Strategy 7.Miscellaneous -------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Version History -------------------------------------------------------------------- 1.0: My last revision, since the theater removed the Giga Wing machine. (Aaargh!) Added the last stages of the game, as well as some secrets. 0.2: Corrected the section on bonus icons. Added pilot names to plane descriptions, and provided strategies for the first three levels and the bosses therein. 0.1: First draft. Describes some of the game mechanics, describes the four planes you can choose, and has a general game strategy and tips. --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2. Basic equipment that every plane has: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Reflect shield: This is something new to shooters (a least, I’ve never seen this before) that has serious ramifications as far as the game play is concerned. If you hold down the fire button, in about a split second a shield will appear around your plane for a short time. Not only are you invincible while the shield is active, but any enemy shots that hit you will bounce off and head for the enemy that fired it. This can be a potent weapon, as many enemies see fit to fire huge amounts of shots at you. The shield expands considerably just before disappearing, reflecting any shots in its vicinity. After you use this, the reflect meter as the bottom will exhaust itself, then start refilling. It doesn’t take too long for this to refill, I’d say around five and a half seconds, but it is long enough for you to do considerable worrying between then and when it says "OK" again, indicating that it’s ready for another use. Force bomb: Every plane’s force bomb has a slightly different effect, but they all have two critical things in common: they dissolve all enemy shots and make you invincible when it’s active, and they tend to do quite bit of damage to the enemy. You start with two bombs, and you can usually find one in each stage. If you lose a plane, your bomb stock is returned to two. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 3. Scoring points ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Naturally, you’ll get points for shooting down enemies. However, if you’re aiming for a high score, you’ll have to take some other things into consideration. First is the bonus icon. Bonus icons appear when you kill most enemies, as well as from reflecting shots. When you touch one, you get the value of the icon, plus the total value of all the icons you’ve previously collected. For example, if you’ve collected five 10 point icons, the next one you collect will be 50 plus the value of the icon you pick up. The total icon value resets if you lose a life or the stage ends. The values of some of these icons is as follows: The diamond with wings icon that you get from small planes is worth 5. The medium size star that you get from larger planes is worth 10. The small stars that the big planes dissolve into are worth 1 each The shields that you get from reflecting shots are 1 each. The big decorated circle with a diamond within that you get from destroying really big or important enemies is worth 70. You can get a lot of points from collecting icons, but there’s a catch: you don’t get the points until after you finish that stage. Therefore, committing suicide for some icons that would put you over the current high score makes no sense, since you wouldn’t get the points until after the stage anyway. There some other end of stage bonuses as well. Fist is the boss bonus, consisting of how much of it you’ve destroyed. If you go straight for its medallion core without destroying its turrets and other equipment, you’ll get a very low boss bonus. Still, if a boss is really giving you a hard time, you should probably just get rid of it as fast as possible. Next is the shot down bonus, which is based on the percentage of enemy aircraft destroyed in the stage. Not much to say about this, but being thorough helps. Finally is the bonus for bombs left in stock. This is pretty insidious, as it sometimes encourages people to die trying to conserve their bombs. Lives for points is definitely a trade you don’t want to do; pretend this bonus doesn’t exist while you’re playing. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4. The Planes ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Each plane has a different fighting style and pilot personality, though I do not yet have the pilots’ background information. Raijin, Pilot: Sinnosuke. This plane has the weakest forward shot of all the planes, but it also fires a pair of wave cannons diagonally up left and up right. The waves fire over a wide area, making it easy to take out enemies that come in wide formations. This setup is also effective against large enemies, since both wave cannons and the frontal attack hit at the same time. This plane runs into the most problems when it has to destroy small, durable targets, such as the medallion core of many bosses. Its force bomb fires lightning in every direction. Carmine, Pilot: Ruby. This fighter is the most powerful and also the fastest in the game. Its frontal attack, which it its only attack, deals lots and lots of damage to anything in its way. You’ll need its extra speed for dodging, because the nature of its attack requires you to get within the firing line of most enemies. This fighter also has problems with taking out enemies to the side, and relies on its speed to carry it from one enemy to the next. Its force bomb is a much stronger version of its normal attack. Porchka, Pilot: Isha. The Porchka has a very strong frontal attack, second only to the Carmine and fully twice as strong as that of the Widerstand. It also fires homing missiles, which are not that strong but can hit an enemy anywhere on the screen. They sometimes don’t home in on enemies behind you, however. It uses the force bomb to summon a hail of ice boulders that affect enemies both in front of and behind it. Widerstand, Pilot: Stuck. This plane’s frontal attack, while only as powerful as that of the Raijin, fires in a constant stream rather than the Raijin’s bursts, so it ends up doing significantly more damage. Still only half as much as the Porchka and not nearly as much as the Carmine. This plane’s main feature is the bombs that it fires out of the pods on either side. These bombs explode either on impact with an enemy or after traveling a certain distance. The explosion lingers, and damages not only the enemy it hits but anything in the explosion’s vicinity. The thing that sets this weapon apart, though, is that it can be aimed up, to the side, straight behind you, or any angle in between. The way to aim the bomb is (you probably won’t like this) to stop firing. When you’re not firing, moving up will make your pods move further back along your plane, while moving down makes the pods go forward. With practice, then, a good Widerstand player can aim at anything on the screen whenever he or she desires to. You have to be sure, though, that you don’t spend too much time concentrating on where your shots are going and not enough on shots heading your way, or you’ll be shot down quickly. Still, the versatility of this plane truly stands out, even if its attack power does not. The Widerstand’s force bomb is kind of weird; an icon appears in the center of the screen that sucks in shots from off screen that damage anything that gets in their way. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5. In-Game Strategy: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I will say this right off the bat: I am not a great player. Nonetheless, often I wince at the way other people play this game, and this section is my way of venting without having to grab these people by their collars and scream, "NO, YOU FOOL! YOU’RE DOING IT ALL WRONG!!" First and foremost is the subject of avoiding enemy fire. Although the folks at Capcom gave you the bombs and shield to protect you, you should still work on your dodging skills before anything else. The better you are at simply avoiding enemy fire, the more you’ll be able to conserve your shield for damage dealing reflections, and your bombs for truly hopeless situations. Every enemy has a firing pattern or set of patterns that it does not deviate from; learn these patterns and you’ll be much better equipped to avoid these attacks. Part of it is psychological, too; if you panic when you see a mess of shots heading your way, chances are you won’t have the presence of mind to avoid the attack. That having been said, the reflect shield is a powerful tool, both as a weapon and as a defense. Reflected shots don’t do huge amounts of damage, but you can often reflect so many shots at once that their total damage adds up to something big. Plus, each reflected shot turns into a bonus icon after it hits an enemy. The more confident you are in your dodging, the more you’ll be able to save your shield for reflecting really dense clusters of enemy fire. Still, if you have a charged shield bar and it looks like you won’t be able to avoid an attack, you shouldn’t hesitate to use the shield; aside from reflecting shots, the shield makes you invulnerable to everything else. You have to be able to see it coming at least a split second before hand, though; starting to charge the shield when an enemy shot is right on top of you will get you killed. Also, don’t rely on the shield to get you through the game; five and a half seconds might not sound that long, but it’s more than enough time for a boss to shoot you down if you’re not good at dodging. If I ever die with even one bomb still in stock, I feel like whacking myself upside the head. You get a six bombs per credit, plus any you pick up during the game. USE THEM. As I said previously, bombs make you invincible, and unlike the shield it takes effect as soon as you press the button. Thus, you can often turn bombs into extra lives by pressing the button at the right time. True, it is a weapon of last resort, but last resort comes up pretty often in this game. If a shot is too close to you for the shield to activate in time, or your shield is still recharging, use the bomb! Don’t worry so much about conserving them; when you become adept at dodging enemy fire, you’ll be able to conserve your bombs by not needing them as often. But when you do need them, use them. I just can’t stress that enough. The last thing I have to say about playing this game is never to put yourself at unnecessary risk for the sake of points. Those shiny bonus icons can be seductive, but when there are enemy shots on top of a cluster of them you’d best not get too greedy. Extended survival will bring you a much higher score than mindless icon-grabbing. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 6. Stage and Boss Strategy ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Canyon Stage This is Sinnosuke and Ruby’s first stage, Isha’s second, and Stuck’s third. The beginning of this stage will see you taking on small waves of fighters while turrets on the side of the canyon fire missiles at you. This is a very easy part and an opportunity to catch plenty of bonus icons and a power-up. After a little while you will fly through an enemy hangar and have the opportunity to take out lots of grounded enemy aircraft, each granting 10 point bonus icons. Just watch out for the large non-grounded plane at the beginning of it and you’ll be fine. You will leave the hangar and end up in the enemy base proper, where you will fight mostly turrets and small tanks. You will occasionally come up against equipment heavy enough to warrant using the shield, like the heavy flying fortress from the demonstration. However, they usually appear in far enough intervals that you can recharge the shield in time, and even if not the shots are pretty easily avoided. Upon escaping the base, you will fight more heavy aircraft, including a not-quite-mini-boss plane that alternates between scattered spreads of shots and a solid stream straight down. Reflect the stream and it’ll go down in no time. A little after that you will face a wave of small planes while the boss aircraft below you nukes a city, appalling whatever character you chose. You will then fight the boss. The boss of this stage will start by firing directly at you with in-built turrets. They don’t fire very many shots at you; keep moving and you’ll be fine. After getting damaged enough, the boss will get impatient and start firing waves of shots in various directions; these can be reflected, or, you can avoid most of them by staying directly beneath the center of the boss, avoiding the occasional freak shot. When its medallion core is revealed, it will start firing walls of shots (with convenient gaps here and there) from either one or two turrets, depending on what level this is for you. If one turret is firing, you should easily be able to avoid it. If two are firing, you might want to muscle your way through with a shield or bomb; either should be able to finish it off. Dock Stage This is Isha and Stuck’s first stage, Sinnosuke’s second, and Ruby’s third. It begins with a few floating turrets, but soon you meet a mid-boss that Sinnosuke and Isha say is just like theirs even though its big and black. This mid-boss begins by firing many more shots to the side than behind it, so stay below it and you’ll be okay. The next thing it will do is fire dense spreads in your general direction at well as some stray shots. You’ll have to pretty much dodge the spreads entirely, or it’s possible to muscle your way through it via shield if you first dodge one or two of the spreads. If this is your first stage, it will skip its second attack and go directly for the third. This is a set of six streams of shots in as many directions. Once started, the streams will slowly change direction, but staying between them is easy. If this is your second or third stage, it will also fire a few shots directly at you in addition to the streams, making the dodging a bit more perilous. After you beat it, a small plane that resembles yours will escape the burning wreckage. The rest of the dock stage will see you taking down medium size enemy planes, turrets that fire lots of shots straight down, and big armored vehicles that fire streams of shots at you. They fire a lot, but pretty much all in one place. The exception is if this is your third stage, in which the heavy vehicles also fire spreads in all directions, which requires either the shield or much better dodging. There is a secret in this level. You will, after fighting two heavy (and I mean heavy) turrets, you will come across an object that resembles a large black mirror. Is will glow and fire a huge amount of tightly-bunched slow moving shots at you in normal circumstances. However, if you take out the massive 5-way turret above it first, the mirror will stop firing and start shooting out massive amounts of 1-point bonus icons. Thanks to Charlie C. for help with this. The boss of this stage is a battleship that starts by firing missiles at you, which are easy to shoot down. It then fires dense clusters of shots at you. This is a good opportunity to use the shield for damage. After a few of these, the turrets will fire small strings of shots at you directly which can be dodged easily. The turrets will then all fire on you at once, which is another good opportunity for reflection. After doing enough damage, the back part of the ship will blow up, the medallion core will be revealed, and the boss will REALLY try to kill you. The boss will fire the shot clusters that you saw at the beginning of the fight. This is shield bait; don’t go for it, as you’re likely to need it shortly. After a few of these, it will fire wide spreads of shots that cover nearly the whole screen, since the front shots go faster than the back shots. After dodging the first spread, you can do major damage by staying close to the turret and reflecting the entire attack with your shield as it comes out. You need some idea of when the turret will fire the spread, but it doesn’t require precise timing. It’s best to stay away from the turrets after that, because after a couple more of those spreads, the turrets will fire at you directly. Cross-hairs will start appearing wherever you happen to be, and those points will blow up at the same time that it fires a spread pattern that takes concentration to avoid. Plus occasionally turrets will be firing directly at you. If that fails, it will create sattelites of fire that circle around the core, protecting it at well as trying to collide with you. If the boss lives long enough, it will blanket its sides, but not the area right below it, with fire. At this point you should be able to destroy it. Rail Stage This is Ruby and Stuck’s second stage, and Sinnosuke and Isha’s third. It starts with some small trains that give good bonuses if destroyed, along with some mediocre enemies, but soon you’ll find yourself between two heavily armed and armored trains. These trains have more weapons have more weapons on their sides than on their backs. This means that you have to pay extra attention to the train that you’re not currently attacking, and it would be suicide to go between them and try to attack them both at once. The train to the right has a medallion in its front car. Destroy it to move on into (surprise) another enemy base. In the base you’ll fight a lot of floating turrets, but these will be the least of your worries when you come up against two heavily armored gun emplacements. Take them out one at a time, using your shield strategically, and you’ll make it past them to fight other similarly heavy equipment between waves of floating turrets. You’ll also face enemy planes the come huge waves and fire the moment they come onscreen. The Raijin and Widerstand will have no trouble, but the Porchka will have a bit of difficulty destroying them all, more so with the Carmine. With those two, a use of the shield may be necessary. It won’t be too long before you fly over a lake, which the boss comes out of. There’s no safe spot against enemy fire, but the most dangerous place for you to be is under either lower corner of the boss, because that’s where most of its guns are angled. Turrets will spring out of those extensions and fire at predetermined angles, while others fire spreads in various directions. It will also sometimes create an energy field which looks like a black hole. This will slowly move toward you until it sustains enough damage to dissipate it. Still this stage of the boss fight isn’t terribly difficult. When the core is revealed, it fights pretty much the same way except for one crucial difference: if the background fades to black and the medallion core tilts forward, GET OUT OF THE WAY! The medallion will fire a wide energy beam directly downward as its turrets cover its diagonals. If you can reflect the turret fire, you will do considerable damage and should be able to quickly destroy the core. Floating Continent: Fourth stage for everyone. After encountering some paltry small turrets on floating platforms, you will encounter an old friend: the black fighter. This fighter (if indeed it can be called that) has lots of firepower but can’t take that much punishment. Your best bet is to weave between its initial spreads, which you should be able to do if you’ve made it this far, and use the shield when it starts firing tons of shots at you. Your opponent should go down quickly if you do it right. The rest of this stage is mostly dominated by smallish vehicles which follow a firing pattern which you will be facing often, especially in the last couple of levels: a stream directly at you in combination with a circular spread of shots. A shield will naturally cut right through this, but you need to be able to get through this attack without shields or bombs if you want to keep you coin spending to a minimum here. Your best bet is to find a hole to the left or right in the spread; your movement should dodge the stream and slip through the circle of shots. To save time, I will call this pattern a circle stream. This level has a secret: about 2/3 through the stage, you will encounter a very large vehicle that shoots a big ol’ mess of shots directly at you. This vehicle can take massive punishment. You must beat it as quickly as possible. If you destroy it fast enough, you can get a coveted 1-up by destroying the circle of orbs that comes soon after. Thanks to Charlie C. for help with this. The boss of this stage is a mask-like vehicle that has turrets attached to either sides. Feel free to destroy the turrets, but don’t destroy the platforms they were on or the turrets will be replaced. This boss specializes in filling the screen with shots in such a pattern that there are only a few places you can be without getting hit. Shields work nicely when the boss goes overboard with it. This boss is unusual in that it does not seem to have a medallion core. Sky stage: The circle stream pattern in this stage is even more prominent than it was in the last stage. You will encounter many, many enemies that do this. The most frequent one is a large oval shaped aircraft that dashes in and QUICKLY fires a circle stream. The shots here are fast and large. Facing two or more of these at once is really, really tough without a shield or bomb. You really have to concentrate to survive this stage. Near the end of this stage, you will meet the black plane….?? This aircraft isn’t black, and doesn’t resemble your aircraft at all, even though the characters say that this thing is designed just like your own planes. After the super-difficult stage, this mini-boss is easy. For all its size, it can’t take much punishment. In fact, its previous incarnation was tougher. The boss of this stage resembles a phoenix. It features turrets on each wing that can fire generic shots right at you or beams straight down. The turrets will glow a bit before firing the beams. Use your normal boss tactics to dismantle it. Like the mini-boss before it, the actual stage makes this boss look easy. Final Stage: This is it, the final boss. This thing is gigantic! It really likes the circle stream pattern for it turrets, so be prepared. Shutting it down one piece at a time is a lot of fun, and not all that hard (though it is tougher than the previous boss). The real fun begins when you strip it down to its core. This thing fires at you. A lot. For the most part, it will abandon the circle stream and simply flood the screen with shots. Your objective here is, as always, to last as long as possible to inflict the damage you need to win. You WILL get shot down; the question is how often. Frequent use of shields and bomb is highly recommended to extend your survival. Eventually, your attacks will prove too powerful, and the last boss will fall. Enjoy the ending, you’ve earned it many times over! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 7. Miscellaneous ------------------------------------------------------------------------ If I find the time to update the FAQ, I hope to add a story section, including the quotes from each character at various points in the game. I will not include the conversations between characters in two players games, because of the immense number of possible conversations, plus the fact that I have no friends that play this game. When I get better, I’ll also include tips for the rest of the levels, as well as the endings. I will not write complete level and boss walkthroughs as my memory is not precise enough to recall, for example, the amount of enemy planes that attack at such-and-such a time, but I can offer general strategies. Anyone with questions or comments about this FAQ can e-mail me at regdren@hotmail.com. I doubt that anyone would want to copy this, but just in case, I’d better be sure. This material is protected by copyright laws and cannot be reproduced for any reason without my permission. There, that ought to cover it. Thanks to Charlie C. for telling me about the secrets mentioned in the walkthrough. Thanks to Capcom for making this great shooter, and thanks to you, the reader, for having the patience to read through my FAQ.