Mega Man & Bass

Mega Man & Bass, known in Japan as Rockman and Forte (ロックマン&フォルテ), is a side-story in the Mega Man classic series that takes place about a year after the events of Mega Man 8, but isn't officially "Mega Man 9". . It was originally released for the Super Famicom (SNES) exclusively in Japan in 1998 but was later ported to the Game Boy Advance and released in 2002-2003.

Release dates
Super Famicom:
 * Japan: April 24, 1998

Game Boy Advance:
 * Japan: August 10, 2002
 * North America: March 12, 2003
 * Europe: March 21, 2003

Overview
The player choose to play with Mega Man or Bass. While Mega Man can charge his shots and slide, Bass can fire in 7 directions (straight up, straight forward, or any diagonal) with a rapid-fire arm cannon, do a double jump, and dash. The original Super Famicom version of Rockman & Forte was marketed exclusively in Japan. However, before the Game Boy Advance version was released in the United States, the Super Famicom version was translated into English and Italian through console emulation.

Mega Man & Bass doesn't utilize the standard 4 or 8 mission select system present in most Mega Man series. After finishing the intro stage, only four stages are selectable initially, including the intro stage. The first three selectable Bosses are (from top to bottom) Cold Man, Astro Man and Ground Man. Defeating the first will unlock Pirate Man and Burner Man, and defeating the third unlocks Tengu Man and Magic Man. Defeating the "middle" Boss, Astro Man, will unlock the last Robot Master, Dynamo Man. Lastly, defeating any of the five unlockable Robot Masters will open the Cyber Hatch area, which acts like the lock to King's fortress. Mega Man/Bass needs to use the Robot Masters' special weapons to open each of the 8 locks, enhabling entry to the final stages.

Story (from the manual)
A declaration of crime...from the criminal!

A surprise declaration has been received...from the man who took over Wiley's base! The message reveals that the illegal trespasser is...KING!

King states that any robot who proves himself superior to human beings should rule the Earth!

King goes on to include a threat to steal the robot data from the museum.

Officials are taking the statements...and threats...with the most extreme seriousness.

Mega Man and Bass are sent out on the double to investigate...

Note: Dr. Wily's name is spelled "Wiley" in the 2002 Game Boy Advance instruction manual. Additionally, Dr. Wily is said to be 57-years-old in the Japanese manual of Rockman & Forte (1998).

Actual Story
Roughly one year after Duo's visit to Earth (sometime during the year 2015), a robot calling himself the Robot King appeared and began to recruit other robots to form a new Robot Army. He believed that robots were not meant to simply serve humans, but rather that they were superior and therefore should be the "masters of the Earth." Dr. Wily was ousted from his own newly completed skull compound and sought refuge at Light Labs and, as a result, Bass was sent alongside Mega Man to put a stop to King's rebellion. When King attacked the Robot Master Museum, Proto Man attempted to stop him, but King cut him in half with his axe and Mega Man and Bass sent him to the lab and confronted him. King withdrew, claiming not to have time for them, and left them to his subordinates. Once his army of Robot Masters was defeated and the cyberspace "Hatches" that locked his fortress were unlocked, the two made their way through his fortress, defeating two war machines along the way, and confronted him. None of their attacks appeared to phase him, so the newly repaired Proto Man came again, charged up his Big Bang Attack (even though it would severely damage his internal systems), and destroyed King's shield. Mega Man and Bass managed to defeat King and, upon his defeat, Dr. Wily appeared on the screen and asked King what was wrong with his "brain washing." He remotely repaired King and then King fled to another room and combined two previous war machines into a giant battle machine, but was defeated again and begged the two to stop Wily's ambitions. Mega Man and Bass then went to Wily's floor of the castle and put a stop to the madness. In the end, Mega Man was sad that an innocent robot was destroyed, but then he received a letter from King and found out that everything was all right. Bass, however, was mad that Dr. Wily had plotted against him, but Wily claimed he wanted to find out if King was stronger than he was. Proto Man teleported in, saw plans for a "King II" on Wily's computer, and then destroyed it, leaving the two to quarrel amongst themselves...

Bosses
Intro Stage Boss: Green Devil (back from Mega Man 8)

Robot Masters
Note: Both Astro Man and Tengu Man have returned from Mega Man 8 to join King's rebellion.

Fortress Bosses
King Stage 1: Atetemino Proto and Monking A

King Stage 2:
 * King Tank
 * King Plane
 * King
 * Jet King Robo (all three previous bosses combined into one)

Final Stage:
 * Rematch with Robot Masters. In order: Cold Man, Astro Man, Dynamo Man, Pirate Man, Burner Man, Magic Man, Ground Man and Tengu Man.
 * Wily Machine and Wily Capsule

Enemy Guide
List of Mega Man and Bass enemies

Level Strategies
Click here to see a walkthrough.

Mega Man & Bass CD Database

 * Click here to see where the 100 CDs are hidden.

There are 100 CDs throughout the stages, each containing data from a important character of the original series (except some like Dr. Cossack, Kalinka, the 4 Dark Men, Doc Robot, Reggae, ...). Some CDs are very easy to find, while others can only be obtained by one character, as it may be too high for Mega Man or too narrow for Bass.

The English CD translations are considered somewhat nonsensical. One notorious example is Dr. Light's Bad Point, "Douchie".

Mega Man & Bass CD Data
Two heroes have joined forces to stop King's evil ambitions! "Which hero is the best!?" Good point: Good Rivals Bad point: Agreements Like: Their own policy Dislike: King

Trivia

 * This is the first console game (aside from Mega Man 7's hidden two-player mode) where Bass is a playable character.
 * This is the only classic Mega Man game on the Super Nintendo that wasn't released in the U.S.
 * This is the only Mega Man game on the Super Nintendo to use a 32-bit art style, like the one seen in Mega Man 8.
 * Mega Man and Bass was never meant to be Mega Man 9. Rather, it was considered to be "Rockman 8.5" by Keiji Inafune and Capcom, Inc.
 * Originally, Mega Man and Bass was meant to be an "alternate continuation" of the Mega Man classic series that followed the events of Mega Man 8, but Mega Man 9's ending directly referenced the ending of Mega Man and Bass (as well as the endings of the other eight numerical games in the series).
 * This is the only non-numbered console game to be directly referenced in Mega Man 9.