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A new type of shoot ' em up emerged in the early 1990s: variously termed " bullet hell ", " manic shooters " and " maniac shooters ", these games required the player to dodge overwhelming numbers of enemy projectiles and called for still faster reactions from players.
Bullet hell games arose from the need for 2D shoot ' em up developers to compete with the emerging popularity of 3D games: huge numbers of missiles on screen were intended to impress players.
Toaplan's Batsugun ( 1993 ) provided the prototypical template for this new breed, with Cave ( formed by former employees of Toaplan, including Batsugun's main creator Tsuneki Ikeda, after the latter company collapsed ) inventing the type proper with 1995's DonPachi.
Manic shooter games marked another point where the shoot ' em up genre began to cater to more dedicated players.
Games such as Gradius had been more difficult than Space Invaders or Xevious, but bullet hell games were yet more inward-looking and aimed at dedicated fans of the genre looking for greater challenges.
While shooter games featuring protagonists on foot largely moved to 3D-based genres, popular, long-running series such as Contra and Metal Slug continued to receive new sequels.
Rail shooters have rarely been released in the new millennium, with only Rez and Panzer Dragoon Orta achieving cult recognition.

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