Puchi Carat
Puchi Carat | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Taito |
Publisher(s) | Taito |
Director(s) | Takahiro Fujito |
Producer(s) | Atsushi Taniguchi Eiji Takeshima |
Designer(s) | Atsushi Taniguchi Takahiro Fujito Chiho Maeda |
Programmer(s) | Michiaki Kaneko Tomoaki Kasuya Yasuhito Nagumo |
Artist(s) | Chiho Maeda Ken Ninomiya Mari Fukusaki |
Composer(s) | Yasuhisa Watanabe |
Platform(s) | Arcade PlayStation Game Boy Color PlayStation 2 Xbox PC PlayStation Network |
Release | October 1997 (Arcade) 1998 (PlayStation) 1999 (Game Boy Color) 2005 (Taito Memories Vol. 1) 2006 (Taito Legends 2) 2008 (PlayStation Network) |
Genre(s) | Breakout clone |
Mode(s) | Single Player Player versus player Player versus computer |
Arcade system | Taito F3 System |
Puchi Carat (プチカラット, Puchi Karatto) is a 1997 video game by Taito.
Gameplay
[edit]The general objective of Puchi Carat is to destroy gem-like blocks using a ball and paddle. Gems "fall in" from the top of the play area one line at a time and are connected to each other either horizontally or vertically. Hitting a gem with the ball will destroy it, and if the destroyed gem causes other gems to no longer be connected to the top of the play area, they fall off, scoring bonus points. Destroying a special flashing gem also destroys all regular gems of the same color in the playfield. There are also metallic blocks that take more than one hit to destroy.
The player controls a paddle at the bottom of the playfield, which can move left and right to bounce the ball back upward. Unlike in most other Breakout-style games, missing the ball does not cost a life or end the game, but rather adds more lines of gems to the top of the playfield. Gem lines will advance on their own after a certain amount of time, as well as when the playfield is cleared entirely or drops below a certain number of gems. If the gems advance across the line at the bottom of the playfield where the paddle resides, the player loses and the game is over.
The arcade version of Puchi Carat features three main gameplay modes: A single-player mode where the goal is to clear a certain number of gem lines, a story mode in which the player challenges each character in a head-to-head battle (where dropped gems are added to the opponent's playfield from the bottom), and a two-player versus mode following the same rules as the story mode. Each of the single-player modes offers three levels of difficulty. Various ports of the game offer additional gameplay modes (such as time-attack mode), more difficulty levels, and expanded storylines for each character.
Plot
[edit]The basic storyline in Puchi Carat centers around the world of "GemStone", where science and magic coexist. Twelve precious gems are stolen, each one coming into the possession of a person with high magic powers. These people dominate the world. Each of the game's twelve characters has an individual story that follows his or her quest to collect all of the gems in order to realize his or her personal dreams.
Reception
[edit]In Japan, Game Machine listed Puchi Carat on their February 1, 1998 issue as being the seventeenth most-successful arcade game of the month.[1]
See also
[edit]- Breakout - the original game of this genre.
- Puzzle Bobble - A puzzle game from Taito's Bubble Bobble game series.
- Block Gal - An anime stylized Breakout clone made by Vic Tokai/Sega in 1987.
- Arkanoid - An earlier Taito Breakout clone from 1986.
- Taito Legends 2 - A compilation disk of over 39 Taito arcade games, including Puchi Carat.
References
[edit]- ^ "Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - TVゲーム機ーソフトウェア (Video Game Software)". Game Machine (in Japanese). No. 557. Amusement Press, Inc. 1 February 1998. p. 21.
External links
[edit]- 1997 video games
- Arcade video games
- Breakout clones
- Game Boy games
- Game Boy Color games
- Multiplayer and single-player video games
- PlayStation (console) games
- PlayStation 2 games
- PlayStation Network games
- Puzzle video games
- Taito F3 System games
- Video games scored by Yasuhisa Watanabe
- Windows games
- Xbox games
- Taito arcade games
- Video games developed in Japan