Mega Man 7

Mega Man 7
North American box art
DeveloperCapcom
PublisherCapcom
DirectorYoshihisa Tsuda
ProducerTokuro Fujiwara
DesignersYoshihisa Tsuda
Ryo Miyazaki
Masayoshi Kurokawa
ProgrammersShinya Ikuta
Keiji Kubori
Kazuhiro Tsuchiya
ArtistsKeiji Inafune
Hayato Kaji
Toshifumi Onishi
Kazunori Tazaki
Tatsuya Yoshikawa
ComposersToshihiko Horiyama
Yuko Takehara
Makoto Tomozawa
SeriesMega Man
PlatformSuper Nintendo Entertainment System
Release
  • JP: March 24, 1995
  • NA: September 1995
  • EU: 1995
GenreAction
ModesSingle-player, multiplayer

Mega Man 7, known in Japan as Rockman 7: Showdown of Destiny!, is a 1995 action game developed and published by Capcom for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). It is the seventh game in the original Mega Man series. The game was released in Japan on March 24, 1995 and was localized later in the year in North America and Europe.

Picking up 6 months after the events of Mega Man 6, the plot involves the protagonist Mega Man once again attempting to stop the evil Dr. Wily, who uses a new set of Robot Masters to free himself from captivity and begin wreaking havoc on the world. Along with some help from his old friends, Mega Man finds potential allies in the mysterious robot pair Bass and Treble, who are later revealed to be in league with Wily. In terms of gameplay, Mega Man 7 follows the same play style introduced in the 8-bit NES titles, but updates the graphics and sound of the series for the more powerful SNES.

According to its creators, Mega Man 7 was only in development for a short time before its release. Keiji Inafune handed off his duties to Hayato Kaji for this installment. Mega Man 7 has received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics. Although many considered it a competent game by itself, many other reviewers thought that the series' formula had gone stale, as they criticized the game for not innovating enough from its predecessors and negatively compared it to the more inventive Mega Man X, released on the SNES over a year earlier, because of it. A sequel, Mega Man 8, was released in 1996.