Astro Boy: Omega Factor

Astro Boy: Omega Factor (Known in Japan as Astro Boy • Tetsuwan Atom: Atom Heart no Himitsu) was based on Astro Boy, released in 2004 for the Game Boy Advance after the Anime's 2003 Reboot. It was developed by Treasure and Hitmaker and published by Sega. Many consider this game an aversion of The Problem with Licensed Games, and a fitting tribute to Osamu Tezuka.

The storyline starts off by following the 2003 Anime. Dr. Tenma, brilliant robotics expert, rebuilds his son as a robot after he is killed in a horrible car accident. When he realizes Astro is no true replacement, he abandons Astro and disappears.

In terms of gameplay, this is a Platformer where Astro can jump and air dash (he's invincible while dashing). Astro has a basic punch combo, although he may freely kick enemies away or fire a finger laser. He also has access to three special attacks that he can build energy for.


 * The Arm Cannon, easily the strongest weapon but leaves Astro wide open to attack.
 * The Machine Guns mounted on his lower backside will clear the screen of all projectiles and temporarily stun all enemies but is the weakest.
 * EX Dash has the smallest area of effect and the hardest to aim. But Astro will attack while dashing, juggling enemies everywhere as he hits them.

There are also a few levels where Astro exclusively flies. He relies on his finger laser for offense, but can dash and use his specials normally.

Despite excellent reviews, this game was mostly passed over for the Playstation 2 game developed by Sonic Team, and this fell into obscurity. Those who did play the game though loved it.


 * Actually, I Am Him:.
 * Air Jousting: The battle with Blue Knight.
 * Atlantis: Mu, pretty much.
 * Back from the Dead: at the end of the first loop, revived by Phoenix.
 * Badass Adorable: Astro, Denkou, Pook and the list goes on…
 * Beating a Dead Player: In the moonbase stage, if you get killed, gravity will take a while to let Astro's body stay still on the ground. In the meantime, enemies will keep attacking Astro as if he were still moving.
 * Big Bad: Sharaku Hosuke.
 * Boss Rush: World's Strongest Robots and World's Greatest Adventure. "The World's Strongest" pits Astro against the five strongest robots in the world. A change from the Manga, where Pluto fights the world's strongest.
 * Bullfight Boss: With the Blue Knight.
 * Character Customization: The game gives no guidelines as to where to put your upgrades, but you'll max out by halfway through Rebirth if you find everyone.
 * Character Development: Atlas, though this can be seen as "re-development".
 * Charged Attack: Astro's beam cannon, which conveniently freezes time while charging.
 * Composite Character: De rigeur for Astroboy adaptations.
 * Rag and Blue Knight are merged into a single character, and both he and Deadcross are now "played" by Rock, though originally they were just one-shot characters. Furthermore, Rock later, becoming the version of the character from the movie Marine Express.
 * Pook, the shape shifting robot from the Crucifix Island story is merged with Pick from Mazin Garon, while his working unwillingly for Skunk parallels Denkou (who also appears in the game but only as a minor boss with little role in the plot).
 * Nuka combines elements from her original 80s anime incarnation as well as Prime Rose's Death Mask, Bem from the original series' Earth's Last Day storyline (humanoid control system for a weapon of mass destruction) and Mitchy and/or Tima from Metropolis (created on Duke Red's orders using the power of Omotanium, plugged into a machine that can affect the sun).
 * Rainbow Parakeet is merged with Sherlock Homespun, the cyborg detective from the original Artificial Sun story.
 * In terms of his fighting style, Montblanc is actually mostly Brando, a different character from the World's Strongest Robot saga, retaining only his namesake's beak-like facial features. Something of a necessity, as the original Montblanc was a pacifist who didn't even try to fight Pluto before being killed by him, whereas Brando was a robot wrestler but one wonders why they didn't just use him to begin with.
 * Sharaku as the game's Big Bad is mainly based on the Evil Overlord of Marine Express but in a post-ending scene, he becomes the original version of The Three-Eyed One.
 * Crossover: Starring Astro, with other characters from Osamu Tezuka's star system show as support characters and villains.
 * Cute Bruiser: Astro and Pook, the transforming robot.
 * Defeat Means Friendship: Blue Knight and the world's strongest robots on the timeline where they do not explode by Astro's fist.
 * The Dev Team Thinks of Everything: If you look carefully, you'll notice that when you first defeat the "World's Strongest Robots", they explode then collapse to the ground, but when you beat them for the second time, they simply fall down..
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: Non-sexual variant. The robot/human conflict in the Antarctic appears very similar to the segregation debates and Civil Rights Movement in the 50's and 60's. As well it should, considering the original manga story it's based on was written during this period.
 * Earn Your Happy Ending: Astro has to use the Time Skip liberally in order to set right all that is wrong.
 * For Massive Damage: Supers.
 * Grimy Water: Only at some points of the 2nd Stage, and it seems to be normal water.
 * Grotesque Cute:.
 * Groundhog Day Loop: Astro eventually gets the ability to warp to any point of time in the loop he wants to go.
 * Guide Dang It:
 * Some of the Omega Factor characters are hidden frustratingly well. While Max Sensors helps (Astro will point out when a character is in a given segment), you'll still be spending a lot of time looking around.
 * An entire subplot necessary to complete the game is initiated in a rather unintuitive manner:.
 * Have We Met Yet?: How Pook is introduced. Later on, when Astro is transported back in time to Mu, it's Pook who doesn't recognize him. And in the New Game+, when you go back to the moment of their first meeting, they recognize each other.
 * Hit Points: But by the three-quarters point of Rebirth, they stop mattering.
 * Hollywood Atheist: One important quest has Astro proving wrong an archeologist, Boon, who doesn't believe in anything that cannot be proved by science..
 * Let's You and Him Fight: Astro fights several heroes/investigators who think Astro is a criminal, or they're the type who fight first and ask questions later.
 * Level Up Fill Up: Adding someone to the Omega Factor restores your health.
 * Loads and Loads of Characters: This game includes many, many, many characters from Osamu Tezuka's many works. Whenever Astro meets one, he gets to boost one of his stats.
 * Massive Multiplayer Crossover: Has all of Tezuka's characters as cameos.
 * Multi Mook Melee: So much the game lags A LOT because of it.
 * Musical Gameplay: A minor example. While hitting enemies into each other does produce increasingly high-pitched xylophone sounds, they're not particularly synched to the music or anything else.
 * New Game+:.
 * Nintendo Hard: It's a Treasure game, folks! On Easy, you begin each life with with, ridiculously, 30 Super attacks and can stock up to 99 of them and enemies deal very low damage. On Hard? Nightmare. Enemies will tear about half of your HP with the lightest of attacks, you can have only 3 Supers now, and there are MANY things that can kill you in a single hit. Let's state that we are not talking about bottomless pits or death spikes. Rebirth Mode is a living hell on any difficulty.
 * No Final Boss for You: The first time through the game, you cannot access the final stage. Finishing the game again lets you access The Very Definitely Final Dungeon.
 * Offscreen Start Bonus: are both just off-screen when you start certain areas.
 * Palette Swap: The games does this with every single mook and even some mid/mini-bosses.
 * Patrick Stewart Speech: Dr. Tenma delivers one in the good end, rousing Astro to lead humans and robots to a bright future. Before that, Black Jack delivered one to him, talking about how important emotions are for humans.
 * Peggy Sue: After the first run through the game, Phoenix saves Astro and grants him Time Travel so he can Set Right What Once Went Wrong.
 * Phlebotinum Bomb
 * Plot Coupon That Does Something: Time travel (the Stage Select) is how Astro saves the world.
 * Robot War: Who's winning depends on the timeline.
 * RPG Elements: Understanding a character's personality lets Astro unlock some of his true potential: health, attack power, number of times he can dash and how good his super senses are.
 * Scoring Points
 * Shout-Out:
 * In addition to Tezuka works, the game is jam-packed with references to previous Treasure game Alien Soldier. For examble, the Artificial Sun has been redesigned to resemble one of Alien Soldier's minibosses, and Mazin Garon fights almost exactly like Leo-Z.
 * References to Gunstar Heroes are also present: the background in one level features buildings that have signs reading "Gunstar", Pook refers to his different forms as "Forces" (similar to the Gunstar Heroes-boss, Seven Force), and two songs from Gunstar Heroes were remixed for Astro Boy: Omega Factor.
 * Astro's six main stats plus the Omega Factor are called "The Seven Forces".
 * Shown Their Work: We did say every character Tezuka ever did, right?
 * Talk to Everyone: In the second half of the game, you'll need to do this. You're bound to need a guide.
 * Time Travel: The main element of the second half of the game.
 * Together in Death: ?
 * Unexpected Shmup Level: It is Astro Boy and the first shmup level appears early, so it is not that surprising. The final one plays a little differently though...
 * Unexpected Shmup Level: It is Astro Boy and the first shmup level appears early, so it is not that surprising. The final one plays a little differently though...