Gradius (1985)

Konami

Arcade · Sharp X68000

3.25 from 300 ratings

726 members have it in their collection · 13 playing now · 119 backlogged · 49 wish listed

How long? Main story 3h · 100% 4h (from 5 logged playthroughs)

One of the defining characteristics of the Gradius series is the use of a "power meter." The power meter is powered by a power-up item, whose purpose, when collected, is to move a highlight to the next power-up on the power meter. When a power-up that the player wants becomes highlighted, he or she may activate it, also causing the highlight to reset.
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Details

Developers
Konami
Publishers
Konami
Genres
Arcade, Shooter
Themes
Action, Science fiction
Franchises
Gradius
Series
Gradius

Release dates

  • May 29, 1985 (Full Release) (Japan) Arcade
  • Sep 1985 (Full Release) (Europe) Arcade
  • Mar 28, 1987 (Full Release) (Japan) Sharp X68000

Also available on

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Rating distribution

5 stars
27
4 stars
69
3 stars
161
2 stars
37
1 star
5
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Community All Reviews Statuses

giopep

Review giopep 4/5 · Sep 22, 2025

I never got into it as a kid, probably because I discovered it too late and/or because I didn’t like the weapons selection system but it’s obviously a massively important game and it still is quite fun. Challenging and fast from the very beginning, full of bizarre ideas, still visually pleasing and with some amazingly catchy music. The last couple …

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I never got into it as a kid, probably because I discovered it too late and/or because I didn’t like the weapons selection system but it’s obviously a massively important game and it still is quite fun. Challenging and fast from the very beginning, full of bizarre ideas, still visually pleasing and with some amazingly catchy music. The last couple of stages are devilishly hard, maybe a bit too much, but that’s where playing it today makes it better: you don’t need coins to continue and you can always use save states.

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SIGINT

Review SIGINT 3/5 · Sep 3, 2025

When I got into shoot-em-up games, the Gradius series was one that I bounced off of quickly without giving much of a chance. In the first game alone, you very quickly run into some of its more punishing ideas and need some time to adjust to its unique power-up system. M2’s Gradius Origins collection offers a great excuse and opportunity …

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When I got into shoot-em-up games, the Gradius series was one that I bounced off of quickly without giving much of a chance. In the first game alone, you very quickly run into some of its more punishing ideas and need some time to adjust to its unique power-up system. M2’s Gradius Origins collection offers a great excuse and opportunity to really sit down with the games and get better at them in a more transparent and customizable package.

That power-up system I mentioned is a major hook right from the start of this first entry. A bar at the bottom of the screen displays a range of available power-ups. Collecting power-up items by killing orange enemies or certain waves highlights the next item on the bar, which you can cash in at any time, resetting the bar back to the start. A typical run might involve quickly grabbing a couple of much-needed speed power-ups, then gradually building up your offensive power before finally grabbing your forward-facing shield that you’ll spend the rest of the life replenishing as needed. It's a sort of unusual system at first, and somewhat awkward if you want to keep an extra shield banked at all times later on for example, but makes for some fun decision-making that makes the relatively easy opening stages feel extra dynamic and interesting.

It’s typical to lose some power on death in these kinds of games, but Gradius’s complete reset of your ship when you’re sent back to a checkpoint is pretty brutal. I feel that it often encourages a loop of just resetting the whole game, but it also gives some opportunity to try and claw your way back up to full strength, which can occasionally work out in a satisfying way. I enjoy playing through the start of the game, so don't necessarily mind resetting. Personally the third stage has a somewhat un-fun and very difficult design which is the thing that takes the wind out of my sails a bit when I think about wanting to try to perfect the game. But generally the game is quite solid, especially for its era, and especially once you get used to some of its particular challenges and tricks. Maybe with some more boss variety (you get the same fight over and over) and a couple stages being better I could say the game is great.

The Origins port has a practice mode as well as an ability to instantly rewind on-demand or on death to perfect a section. You can also toggle on highlighting for the hitboxes of the player, enemies, and projectiles. These hitboxes often differ significantly from what the sprites imply, so it’s helpful to see it, but I can’t really play with it on since I feel the way it’s implemented hurts the game’s overall legibility. I haven't played the other games in the collection yet, but am definitely glad I revisited the first one and was able to finally appreciate and enjoy it.

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JLucasCAraujo

Status JLucasCAraujo May 25, 2025

Fun, but all games from the arcade age had its difficulty increased so kids spent more money in the machines. More deaths, more coins sold!

But really, its a fun game, specially for a game from the 1985, I mean, I had more fun playing this than playing TES Arena or Daggerfall.

I don't know if its worth trying to …

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Fun, but all games from the arcade age had its difficulty increased so kids spent more money in the machines. More deaths, more coins sold!

But really, its a fun game, specially for a game from the 1985, I mean, I had more fun playing this than playing TES Arena or Daggerfall.

I don't know if its worth trying to complete it since it has its probably better sequences. Ill try all of them later.

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internpepper

Status internpepper Jun 10, 2024

It didn't age super well, but for the time, the amount of upgrades were really diverse for a port with only two buttons. I loved learning what each powerup did, and exploring how they were useful in various situations.

Now, the flaws. My poor thumb. Just let me hold down the button to fire. No? Alright. There are a lot …

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It didn't age super well, but for the time, the amount of upgrades were really diverse for a port with only two buttons. I loved learning what each powerup did, and exploring how they were useful in various situations.

Now, the flaws. My poor thumb. Just let me hold down the button to fire. No? Alright. There are a lot of "gotchas" in this game. The most notorious one is failing to get into the tunnel in the last stage before the wall closes. Great, now I gotta respawn in the most dangerous room with no upgrades. The bosses get re-used in every stage, which while a welcome break in difficulty, brought down the overall experience.

The mini-bosses are usually just environmental hazards where you have to practice through trial and error what sections are safe. Then, after a complete mess of a final level where enemy ever is flooding the screen with bullets, the final boss is... a stationary object that can't even attempt to fight back.

While an uneven and often frustrating experience, the levels and music were engaging enough along with using all the powerups. I look forward to seeing how this series grows over time.

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scoopings

Status scoopings Mar 8, 2023

I had read this is super hard, and for the first few mins I was like, wow I'm a good player look at me go. And then my screen became one mass of enemies and bullets aimed at me and yeah, I kept dying lol. I love me some Scramble, and this clearly is its sequel/descendent and I love it …

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I had read this is super hard, and for the first few mins I was like, wow I'm a good player look at me go. And then my screen became one mass of enemies and bullets aimed at me and yeah, I kept dying lol. I love me some Scramble, and this clearly is its sequel/descendent and I love it for that. Good game, but a bit too much for me. It was fun going insanely fast from the power-ups tho lol

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Yungbeck

Review Yungbeck 3/5 · Apr 16, 2022

Gradually Gradius

gradius

In space, no-one can hear you rage. Gradius is very difficult, and if you die, you lose all your upgrades. Might as well start over at that point. Your ship isn't originally as fast as in other shooters, and you really need every single pickup you can get a hold of - and you need to hang on to them …

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gradius

In space, no-one can hear you rage. Gradius is very difficult, and if you die, you lose all your upgrades. Might as well start over at that point. Your ship isn't originally as fast as in other shooters, and you really need every single pickup you can get a hold of - and you need to hang on to them if you wanna survive. It's not a long game at all, but without the upgrades it's pretty much over and donzo. At least it was for me!

Bosses are pretty simple in design and attack pattern, but the level design is vibrant and cool looking, especially the moai heads i space stage! Music is catchy and energetic and keeps you on your toes, all locked in, sometimes you're not even breathing for 30 seconds trying to navigate your way through a swarm of enemies and projectiles! There's some slowdown when there's a lot going on, but it kinda helps you out playing in a bit of slowmotion. Gradius is a well known classic, still being released, and if you're a fan of shmups you already know this game!

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ApramPepo

Review ApramPepo 3/5 · Mar 2, 2022

Ridiculously Hard.

This game made me appreciate Ghosts 'n Goblins so much more tbh. In comparison, I found Gradius Way, WAY harder to play, despite Ghosts 'n Goblins starting very hard from the start.

The difference between the two is: One game is showing you that It's going to be a hard Grinding game from the beginning, and the other one just …

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This game made me appreciate Ghosts 'n Goblins so much more tbh. In comparison, I found Gradius Way, WAY harder to play, despite Ghosts 'n Goblins starting very hard from the start.

The difference between the two is: One game is showing you that It's going to be a hard Grinding game from the beginning, and the other one just straight up throws you into a mine battle.

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WildScallion

Status WildScallion Sep 28, 2021

Been playing this on switch online a bit and wow, this is brutal. I'm not the greatest at shooters, but make one mistake and it's game over, because you lose all your power ups.

I've probably played about an hour and made it past the first stage once.

kingbk83

Review kingbk83 3/5 · Jul 24, 2021

Extremely Tough, But Fun

I've been in a shmup mood lately. Tried Raiden, but got stuck around level 4. Decided to give Gradius another go on the Nintendo Switch Online. This is one of Konami's first games on the NES and it has their trademarks all over the place: high level of difficulty, fun pick up and play action and the trademark code. This …

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I've been in a shmup mood lately. Tried Raiden, but got stuck around level 4. Decided to give Gradius another go on the Nintendo Switch Online. This is one of Konami's first games on the NES and it has their trademarks all over the place: high level of difficulty, fun pick up and play action and the trademark code. This is a fun game, but be warned that the challenge in this game can be quite frustrating and at times unfair.

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Reset_Tears

Status Reset_Tears Apr 5, 2021

A horizontally-scrolling shooter on the NES. I've played various Gradius games over the years, never really getting far in any of them and generally just finding them to be... good. I mostly like the stranger quirks of the series, like the presence of Easter Island head statues in an outer space setting.

This first entry for the franchise is really …

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A horizontally-scrolling shooter on the NES. I've played various Gradius games over the years, never really getting far in any of them and generally just finding them to be... good. I mostly like the stranger quirks of the series, like the presence of Easter Island head statues in an outer space setting.

This first entry for the franchise is really damn difficult ("Nintendo hard!"), and some of the sound effects (namely the laser) are super annoying. But there's still a good time to be had, and the upgrade system it used played a huge role in the game's enjoyability and replayability. Experiment with all the different weapons, and see how far you can get.

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thegameistobesold

Status thegameistobesold Dec 30, 2020

Fun shooter but when you maximize SPEED holy shit it's too fast you'll be crashing everywhere!

Once you get the shields and invincibility code it's smooth sailing from there and actually beatable! Props to everyone who beat this game legitimately lol!

KP_Neato_Dee

Status KP_Neato_Dee Aug 8, 2019

Wow! It's somewhat alarming how bad I am at this! ;)

Playing via the NES and "Gradius Collection" on the PSP. I prefer the PSP one because it has adjustable skill levels but otherwise it's emulating the coin-op.

Westane

Review Westane 3/5 · Mar 30, 2015

Review / Playthrough

History:
My teen years were consumed by two types of arcade games. The first 2D fighting games. Tekken could suck it, I had Marvel vs Capcom 2 and Samurai Showdown to play. The second were shmups, specifically Raiden and R-Type. At home, however, my only scrolling shooter option was my copy of Gradius III for the SNES. Not until years …

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History:
My teen years were consumed by two types of arcade games. The first 2D fighting games. Tekken could suck it, I had Marvel vs Capcom 2 and Samurai Showdown to play. The second were shmups, specifically Raiden and R-Type. At home, however, my only scrolling shooter option was my copy of Gradius III for the SNES. Not until years later would I learn the first entry was released on the NES.

Expectations:
I'm honestly expecting Gradius, but worse... ish... I mean Gradius is awesome no matter what, but I have some concerns as to how it will play on the NES.

I need all the advantages I can getI need all the advantages I can get

Finally, it's finally time to dust this baby off! I'm actually writing this post immediately after beating StarTropics at 11:45pm on a Tuesday so I only have about two minutes to play, but damned if I don't get those two minutes in.

The game fires right up (First try!) and is, as expected, simpler than its sequels in that there is no weapon selection or configuration. You just press Start and you're off. I'm cool with this. The first thing I notice is that this game is buttery smooth, so much so I get distracted and die early... because I was distracted... The game is fast and awesome and I'm pretty sure I'm not gonna beat it but I'm gonna give it my best!

After accidentally beating the first stage, I power down and head to bed. Until tomorrow!

Night 2:

wpid-20150211_185917.jpgThe Advantage ended up being... not that. I guess I'm just too accustomed to using a D-pad. Same with fighting games. Anyway, Gradius did a good job at reminding me how unfair it is over the course of the first three stages.

And that's where I am, Stage 3. While I'm having fun playing, this appears to be my stopping point, even with the Konami Code refilling my power-ups once per continue. The game, like Gradius III, is so reliant on power-ups that when you do die and come back with nothing, you may as well just reset the game.

Gradius is a fun distraction, but I'm not sure mastery of this game is quite within reach...

Night 3:

Another hour of me smashing my face into my controller. I'm definitely finding myself having less and less fun with the game the more I play it, and I think it's time to hang it up...

Conclusion:
I still have fun with this game, but for me the fun comes from picking it up for a few minutes at a time to shoot some aliens, then putting it down. By playing nothing but Gradius for three days straight, I nearly came to hate it. That said I'm still very impressed with how well it plays on the NES, though its SNES counterpart will most likely still be my Gradius of choice moving forward.

Play it Again?
Yep! Frequently in fact. When I need that arcade action. Will I ever sit down and beat it though? No, probably not.

Personal Score:

Fun : 17 Relevance : 15 Replayability : 15 Survivability : 13 Total : 60
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