70s-style Robot Anime Geppy-X returns after 27 years
Some games become classics because they sell millions. Others survive because a small group of players simply refuses to forget them. 70s-style Robot Anime Geppy-X belongs firmly in the second group.
Originally released only in Japan in 1999, this four-disc PlayStation shooter was a commercial disappointment. Despite its huge amount of animation, music and voice acting, it never found the audience its creators hoped for. However, a tiny but loyal fanbase kept talking about it, collecting it and celebrating just how weird and ambitious it was. Now, 27 years later, Geppy-X has finally returned worldwide on modern platforms.
The game is a side-scrolling shoot ’em up built to look and feel like a completely fictional robot anime from the 1970s. You play as the pilots of Geppy-X, a giant combining robot created to defend Earth from the Cosmic Demon Empire and its army of oversized mechanical monsters. Naturally, this means dramatic attacks, ridiculous villains and plenty of explosions.
More than just another retro shooter
What really makes the game stand out is the way it presents its adventure. Instead of simply moving from one stage to the next, Geppy-X treats every mission like an episode of an old television show. There are opening songs, commercial breaks, eyecatches, transformation scenes, ending credits and previews teasing what will happen next. It is the kind of commitment to a theme that turns a fun shooter into something genuinely memorable.
Geppy-X can also transform between three different forms during combat. Each one has its own weapons, speed and strengths, so switching at the right moment can make difficult enemy waves and boss fights much easier. The shooting still has a little of that PS1-era stiffness, but the changing forms, branching story moments and alternate scenarios give players plenty to experiment with.
A more familiar comparison would be Gradius, since both games are side-scrolling shooters built around dodging enemy fire, collecting upgrades and surviving huge boss battles. However, Geppy-X adds its own ridiculous charm by wrapping the action inside a complete fake 1970s robot anime, with theme songs, episode previews and dramatic transformation scenes.
The original game included more than 8,000 hand-drawn animation frames, an unusually ambitious amount for a shooter. For this new release, the footage was restored from the original Betacam master tapes, allowing the animation to look smoother and cleaner than it did on the original PlayStation.
Geppy-X may have failed commercially in 1999, but its comeback proves that cult games can sometimes get a second chance. Use our price comparison tool to find the best prices for 70s-style Robot Anime Geppy-X and join one of gaming’s most unexpected robot revivals.