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Fox McCloud [a] is a fictional character and the chief protagonist of Nintendo's Star Fox series. He is an anthropomorphic red fox created by Shigeru Miyamoto and designed by Takaya Imamura . He was introduced as the sole playable character in the original 1993 video game Star Fox .
The Star Fox team from Star Fox: Assault (2005); from left to right, Slippy Toad, Fox McCloud, Falco Lombardi and Krystal. Star Fox is a series of spaceship shooter games published by Nintendo. The main protagonist and player character of the series is Fox McCloud, the leader of Star Fox, a team of anthropomorphic animals in the Lylat planetary ...
Star Fox is an arcade style rail shooter, space flight simulator, and third person action-adventure video game series created by Shigeru Miyamoto, developed and published by Nintendo. The games follow the Star Fox combat team of anthropomorphic animals, led by chief protagonist Fox McCloud.
Star Fox 64 is a 3D rail shooter game in which the player controls one of the vehicles piloted by Fox McCloud, usually an Arwing.Most of the game takes place in "Corridor Mode", which forces Fox's vehicle down an on-rails path straight forward through the environment.
Fox reformed briefly in 1980, releasing the new wave-influenced "Electro People", written as the theme music for the Kenny Everett Show in 1981. [5] The band considered a reunion in the early 1990s, but the tracks recorded at this time were unreleased until 2004, when they appeared as bonus tracks on the Tails of Illusion CD.
McCloud is a Scottish or Irish surname, most likely a variant of MacLeod. Notable people with the surname include: Notable people with the surname include: Coyote McCloud (1942–2011), disc jockey in Nashville, Tennessee
Fox McCloud, the main character in the Star Fox series James McCloud, Fox's father; The title character of Brewster McCloud, a 1970 film by Robert Altman; Sam McCloud, main character of McCloud (TV series), an American television police drama that aired from 1970 to 1977; Louise "Lou" McCloud, from the television series The Young Riders
Star Fox 2 inspired the design of later Star Fox games. [9] [10] Free-range flying and grounded vehicle gameplay were implemented into Star Fox 64, [50] [51] as was the Star Wolf team. [5] Nintendo and Q-Games played Star Fox 2 to gather inspiration on its strategic gameplay elements for Star Fox Command.