Outfoxed: Star Fox Can’t Dodge Its ’90s Roots, But It Can Still Evolve

Star Fox, like so many oddball Nintendo inventions, came out at the right time, with the right novelty. Powered by the 3D-rendering wizardry of the Super FX chip, the Super Nintendo classic was both a technical achievement back in 1993—one of Nintendo’s earliest three-dimensional games—and, perhaps more importantly, genuinely fun.
Even today the 16-bit rail shooter manages to neatly capture what makes Star Fox so charming. Much like in latter games, a ragtag band of mercenary animal pilots take off in angular fighter craft to target lasers and lob smart bombs at incoming bogeys. They soar through scrolling alien worlds, dodge asteroids, and yes, pull off more than a few barrel rolls along the way. Sure, the levels are pieced together from simplistic shapes, and there’s not much finesse to the dogfighting. But answering the call to scramble Arwings is still just as thrilling.
What the original Star Fox invented, Star Fox 64 perfected. Almost 20 years after players fought against the monstrous simian warlord Andross on the Nintendo 64, the adventure is almost undisputedly seen as the best game under the Star Fox banner. It hooked a generation of gamers with flawless aerial combat and quotable banter between wingmen. I didn’t grow up with an N64, and I’m still impressed that a flight shooter with talking animals could grow so iconic.
In hindsight, the game might have been a little too iconic. Star Fox 64 refined its predecessor’s formula so flawlessly, it left little room for sequels to make meaningful improvements. Ever since, Nintendo has struggled to find a comfortable spot for the vintage spaceship combat series in its pantheon. Star Fox Adventures slapped the Star Fox brand onto a competent Zelda clone. Star Fox Assault muddled things up with ho-hum on-foot shooting sections. Star Fox Command made a better impression, but its mix of turn-based strategy and DS touch screen controls shifted it away from what purists expected from a true revival.
Without a 3DS remake of Star Fox 64 to tide fans over in 2011, Nintendo would have gone ten years without releasing a game in the franchise. Now the company pegs Star Fox Zero for the Wii U as a reimagining of that same classic. Though augmented with gyroscopic controls, HD visuals, and vehicle transformations, the latest Star Fox game promises retro appeal, right down to its name.