Godzilla (Game Boy)

Godzilla

North American cover art
Developer(s) Compile
Publisher(s) Toho
Nintendo (Europe)
Composer(s) Ifukube Akira (Theme song)
Masanobu Tsukamoto
Series Godzilla
Platform(s) Game Boy
Release date(s)
  • JP: December 18, 1990
  • NA: October 1990
  • EU: 1991
Genre(s) Action
Mode(s) Single-player

Godzilla (ゴジラくん 怪獣大行進 Gojira-kun: Kaijū Daikōshin) is a Game Boy video game developed by Compile. Although it was released in 1990 (1991 in Europe), all of the monsters are from the Showa generation. The game is a port of an edition from the MSX console. Also the international version is slightly different from the Japanese version (different in-game character designs and behavior of the enemy characters).

Plot

Various monsters that Godzilla had previously defeated, have kidnapped his son, Minilla, and hidden him somewhere inside the Labyrinth of Matrix. It is up to Godzilla to fight the monsters' attacks and solve their many puzzles, all while navigating a much larger maze.

Gameplay

The game is a 2D side-scrolling video game where Godzilla can only walk around or climb ladders, vines or crystals. A prominent part of the game is his punch, the only attack he has, which is used to destroy boulders, and to kill or push enemies. The main point of each room is to destroy all of the boulders, by pushing them against a wall and hitting it again. Once all of the boulders are gone, one or two arrow panels will appear somewhere in the room. Touching one will take Godzilla to the room in a large map corresponding to its direction. As levels are completed, the direction is revealed on the map for further use.

There are two power-ups: the hourglass and the lightning bolt. The hourglass stops all enemy movement for a short period of time. The lightning bolt kills all enemies on-screen, except for Ghidorah.

Saving

The game uses a password system to save. There are two variations: a four-character password and an eighteen-character password. Four-character passwords only save the player's position on the map, while eighteen-character passwords saves the revealed map points. Neither of them saves extra lives or the player's score.

Monsters

Japanese version

There are a few differences in Japanese version when compared to the International versions:

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.