Disney's TaleSpin

aka: TaleSpin
Moby ID: 18224
NES Specs
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Description official description

Based on the Disney cartoon Talespin. Baloo's airline cargo company, Higher for Hire, makes deliveries all around the world. The air pirates, lead by the daring Don Karnage, have increased their attacks against air travel. In order to foil the plans of the pirates, Baloo trades in his normal plane for a "Mini Sea Duck", designed to fly more maneuverably. To get his cargo delivered on time, Baloo must fly over many dangerous areas, and also pick up any cargo stolen or scattered by the air pirates. Eventually, the fortress of the air pirates themselves must be destroyed for air travel to remain safe and profitable.

Talespin is a side-scrolling shooter, moving left to right across the screen. The Mini-Seaduck can fire projectiles and switch direction, flying right-to-left while upside-down. The money you make from recovery of these cargo items can be used to purchase upgrades at the end of each level from Wildcat, the mechanic. Many strange boss creatures and devices will guard the final areas of most levels.

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Reviews

Critics

Average score: 67% (based on 13 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.5 out of 5 (based on 17 ratings with 1 reviews)

A devilish shooter from Disney/Capcom classic era.

The Good
TaleSpin is a shooter made by Capcom based on Disney's animated spin-off of The Jungle Book. By the late 80's Capcom had amassed a vast experience with the shooter genre: 1942 (1984), Exed Exes (1985), Battle for Midway (1987), Area 88 (1989) and many, many others. So it was only logical for them to make a shooter with the IP from a Disney Saturday morning cartoon about planes and aviators.
Still it's far from generic and has interesting mechanics. You control a plane that shoots horizontally: B shoots, and A inverts your plane, a loop-the-loop, to sometimes scroll in the opposite direction; but when you ascend or descend your plane, you do it at an angle so you are able to shoot in diagonals (it's kind of weird at first) The game makes a good use of this because some enemies and bosses required that you shoot at them in angles. So this combination of different types of shooting with the constant need of changing the scrolling direction makes for a very interesting shooter.

It has a super fast scrolling, very rare to see this sort of speeds with minimum lag on the NES; it really adds to the challenge. The Gameboy down-port - which is of course a downgraded version of the original - also has an impressive fast scrolling for the system. It has 8 thematic levels; and though some of them are just ridiculous - like flying your plane inside a Haunted Mansion - it's all done in good fun. The graphics are beautiful, cute and colorful and the music serves its purpose.

The Bad
I've found it to be quite a difficult game, specially on the early levels. Your plane is too big and slow, it controls weird; the enemies pop out of nowhere, their bullets and the scrolling are at times way too fast, and you can only shoot one bullet at a time. But by collecting the money bags, and cargo boxes you get to buy upgrades for your plane: that means more speed, more bullets, an extra heart and lives. Also the game has some invisible items that you can make suddenly appear by shooting at empty space, but the problem is that when you want to kill an enemy frequently these items obstruct your bullets causing unfair hits from the still alive enemy. I don't know who actually made TaleSpin (has no credits) but I feel somehow Tokuro Fujiwara was involved, on behalf of the difficult challenge and certain enemies and aspects that remind me of the Makaimura series (but then again, this whole Capcom era had this "challenging games" philosophy)

The Bottom Line
TaleSpin may not be Capcom's best shooter, but its unique mechanics, challenging gameplay, and charming Disney theme make it a hidden gem worth exploring for fans of classic Capcom.

NES · by pelida77 (36) · 2023

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  • MobyGames ID: 18224
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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Shoddyan.

Game Boy added by Freeman.

Additional contributors: formercontrib.

Game added June 26, 2005. Last modified September 8, 2023.