Balloon Fight Wiki
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For other uses, see Balloon Fight.

Balloon Fight (バルーンファイト Barūnfaito) is an "Action Series" game for the NES and Famicom systems. It is referenced in many Nintendo games today. It was developed alongside Vs. Balloon Fight.

Gameplay[]

The player takes the role of the Balloon Fighter, in one of three different modes. Game A, 1-Player Game, is a series of single-screen phases where the player must defeat all of the Balloon Birds on screen to progress to the next. Game B, 2-Player Game, is the same as Game A but with a second player who is able to either cooperate with player one or attack them. Game C, Balloon Trip, is an endless obstacle course scrolling from left to right where the player must avoid Sparks while collecting as many Balloons as they can.

Falling into the water will cause the player to lose a life, of which you can only have at most two extra lives in modes A and B. In Balloon Trip, however, you only have one chance and the game will end if you fall into the water. In the first two modes, if both of the player's Balloons are popped, such as by being hit by a Balloon Bird or touching one of the Sparks that the clouds produce, they will fall into the water.

Phases[]

BalloonFight-Phase09

Phase 9

There are 12 unique phases in total. After every 3 phases there will be a Bonus Round. Each group of three levels is given its own color palette, with the first three having light green grass, phases 4-6 having red grass, 7-9 having blue-green grass, and 10-12 having blue grass. Once the player completes all twelve phases, the counter continues to increase but the game continues to cycle through phases 4-12.

Scoring[]

BalloonBirds

The Balloon Birds, the primary enemies of the game.

The player is rewarded with points for popping Balloons, whether those are free-floating, held by Balloon Birds, or even the other player. The player can also gain points from popping Giant Bubbles, kicking Balloon Birds while they're on the ground, or ripping their parachutes as they fall. The player is also granted bonus points for popping every Balloon in a Bonus Round.

Cause Point Value
Popping a Giant Bubble 500
Kicking a Balloon Bird 750 (Pink)

1000 (Green)

1500 (Yellow)

Popping a Balloon Bird's Balloon 500 (Pink)

750 (Green)

1000 (Yellow)

Ripping a Balloon Bird's Parachute 1000 (Pink)

1500 (Green)

2000 (Yellow)

Attacking the other player 1000
Popping a free-floating Balloon 300 (Green)

500 (Orange)

700 (Red)

Getting a Super Bonus 10000 (First Bonus Round)

15000 (Second Bonus Round)

20000 (Third Bonus Round)

25000 (Fourth Bonus Round)

30000 (Fifth Bonus Round and beyond)

Availability[]

This game has been ported and re-released in various forms following the initial release in 1985, starting with a simultaneously released version for the Playchoice-10. The first ports to exist were officially licensed PC ports developed by Hudson Soft, including versions for the Sharp X1, PC-8801, and Sharp MZ-1500. Although never released, there seemed to be plans to re-release Balloon Fight for the Famicom Disk System, according a to a leak of Nintendo's internal files. The first standalone handheld port was made for the Sharp Zaurus PDA in 2001, followed by both Balloon Fight-e and Famicom Mini: Balloon Fight on the Game Boy Advance. Later the game became a standard addition to the Virtual Console on the Wii, 3DS, and Wii U, as well as being included in the Nintendo Switch Online service. The game also received a complete remake in the form of Tingle's Balloon Fight DS, a Japanese Club Nintendo exclusive game in which Tingle from the Legend of Zelda series replaces the Balloon Fighter. It was also included as one of the 30 games on the NES Classic Edition console. Beyond the official releases, there was one unofficial clone on the Watara Supervision, as well as several hacks of the game.

The game has also been included within several other Nintendo games in a playable form. The first instance of this was Doubutsu no Mori on the N64, where players could play the entire game using a special item. This playable version was retained in later re-releases, as well as the localized version known as Animal Crossing. Trial versions of Balloon Fight which had a strict time limit appeared in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and amiibo Tap: Nintendo's Greatest Bits, both on the Wii U. While the full game is not accessible, short segments of gameplay from Balloon Fight are playable as challenges in both NES Remix and its 3DS successor, Ultimate NES Remix.

Main article: List of Lost Balloon Fight Games

As of February 2019, the following known ports of Balloon Fight are unavailable to the general public due to services shutting down:

  • Sharp Zaurus
    • The service through which the game was originally downloadable is now defunct. No known backups exist online.
  • Wii Virtual Console
    • With the Wii Shop Channel's closure, there is no official way to purchase this version. However, it is still possible to re-download the game if it was bought before the shut down, though this service may not last indefinitely either. It is currently unknown if the game has been backed up online.

The 3DS and Wii U versions will become unavailable, along with everything else on those systems' eShops when the services are shutdown in March 2023. The Switch Online port will also likely become unavailable and possibly even unplayable at some point in the future, simply due to its reliance on having an active subscription.

Glitches[]

Rank 47 & Resets[]

In the US and PAL versions of the game, when a player starts Balloon Trip mode they will start at Rank 47. Also, in these versions, resetting the game will erase all top scores and clear the Balloon Trip score ranking. Both of these are the result of several sound effect variables being misplaced, overwriting parts of memory that were supposed to be reserved for the game.

This was fixed in the Japanese version of the game, as well as the unreleased Famicom Disk System version. By simply moving these variables to an unused part of memory, the Balloon Trip Rank now starts at 50 and top scores are preserved between resets.

Vertical Speed Conservation[]

In all direct-port versions of the game, the player's vertical speed is not reset after the player dies. Usually, most deaths involve having a downward velocity, although if the player is moving upward while being eaten by the fish, the player will "jump" into the air upon respawning, even keeping the standing pose while in the air.

Player 2 Disadvantage[]

It is possible to start a two player game where player two starts the game with only one Balloon. The following steps seem to trigger it:

  1. Play Balloon Trip until a Bubble appears.
  2. Pop the Bubble and then hit a Spark.
  3. Start the two player game.

This glitch seems to be caused by the second player and the Bubble in Balloon Trip mode sharing the same object slot in memory, and the player's state isn't completely reinitialized between games.

Travel Underwater[]

If the player travels under the water and moves past the edge of the screen without getting eaten by the Fish, they will wrap to the other side of the sea and can escape if they don't get eaten.

Balloon_Fight_(NES)_-_Travel_Under_the_Sea

Balloon Fight (NES) - Travel Under the Sea

Phases A0-00 and up[]

PhaseA0

For Phases 100-255, the phase counter will start displaying the number incorrectly, such as showing "Phase A0" for what should be Phase 100, and "Phase P5" for what should be Phase 255. After this, the counter will reset back to 0, although it will not start the cycle of normal phase designs at "Phase 1" at this point. It will continue with the usual cycle of phases 4-12, but the count will continue to increase regardless.

Trivia[]

  • There are some leftovers from Vs. Balloon Fight that weren't implemented in-game, such as the "End" ticket and the ceiling barrier tiles.
  • Two versions of the cartridge exist: a "3-Screw" version and a "5-Screw" version. In fact, most NES games have a "3-Screw" and a "5-Screw" version, usually having a rarer version. In Balloon Fight's case, the the 3-Screw variant is the rarer one, as it was produced later, likely when everyone who wanted the game had it. Also, the 3-Screw variant had the updated white oval Nintendo Seal of Quality, which is still used to this day. The 5-Screw version uses the older round black Nintendo Seal of Quality.
  • Several different labels for different regions such as the European version, the Hong-Kong version, the Mattel-Italy version, and the Famicom version.
  • This is the last Balloon Fight game to have the blue Balloon Fighter. The last appearance of the blue Balloon Fighter was Ultimate NES Remix, where he appears in various places, but is in no way playable, since the game is only in single-player challenges.
  • The in-game copyright states it was copyrighted in 1984, although it was released in 1986. The copyright shows 1984 because that was the year Vs. Balloon Fight was released, and there likely wasn't space (or really a need) to have it say "1984-1986". After all, Balloon Fight was intended to be a port of Vs. Balloon Fight to the NES.
  • In Nintendo Badge Arcade, a free application for the 3DS which allows players to decorate their home menus with badges won in a crane game, there is a series of pixel art badges. One of these badges is of the Famicom cartridge of Balloon Fight.
  • According to an interview with Shigeru Miyamoto, the flying mechanics in this game were reused in Super Mario Bros. for when the player character is swimming.
  • Because this is the first Balloon Fight game to feature pausing, it is the first game with Pause Slowdown.
  • In the years since this game came out, there have been many pieces of merchandise made based on it. Some of these were released alongside relevant ports or remakes on newer hardware.

Gallery[]

Games
Balloon Fighting Games Vs. Balloon Fight (Arcade) - Balloon Fight (NES)
Remakes PC-8801 - Sharp X1 - Sharp MZ-1500 - Tingle's Balloon Fight DS (DS)
Ports Playchoice-10 - Sharp Zaurus - Balloon Fight-e (GBA) - Famicom Mini: Balloon Fight (GBA) - Wii Virtual Console - Balloon Fight (3DS) - Wii U Virtual Console - Nintendo Switch Online - Arcade Archives VS. BALLOON FIGHT (Switch)
Balloon Trip Games Balloon Fight (Game & Watch) - Balloon Kid (GB) - Balloon Trip Breeze (Wii U)
Remakes Hello Kitty World (Famicom) - Balloon Fight GB (GBC)
Ports Balloon Fight GB (3DS) - Balloon Kid (3DS)
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