DoDonPachi DaiOuJou

(Redirected from DoDonPachi Dai-Ou-Jou)

DoDonPachi DaiOuJou[c] is the fourth arcade game in Cave's DonPachi series.[1] The history section of DoDonPachi Resurrection on iPhone calls it DoDonPachi Blissful Death in localisation. CAVE later ported the game to iOS under this localised name.[2]

DoDonPachi DaiOuJou
Developer(s)Cave[a]
Publisher(s)AMI[b]
Director(s)Tsuneki Ikeda
Producer(s)Kenichi Takano
Designer(s)Akira Wakabayashi
Junya Inoue
Programmer(s)Takashi Ichimura
Artist(s)Hiroyuki Tanaka
Kengo Arai
Shohei Satoh
Composer(s)Manabu Namiki
SeriesDonPachi
Platform(s)Arcade, PlayStation 2, Xbox 360, iOS
Release
5 April 2002
  • Arcade
    Black Label
    • JP: 25 October 2002
    Tamashii
    PlayStation 2
    Xbox 360
    iOS
Genre(s)Bullet hell
Mode(s)
Arcade systemPolyGame Master

Gameplay

edit
 
Arcade version screenshot

DaiOuJou follows the conventions of the previous game with only a few changes. The chaining system is intact and works in much the same way. Causing an enemy to explode fills a meter, and every enemy destroyed before the meter depletes adds to the current chain and again refills the meter. Holding the laser weapon over a large enemy will hold the meter steady and slowly accumulate hits. In this way it is possible to create a single chain out of any of the 5 stages.[3]

The controls in DaiOuJou are identical to the previous games in the series, and the same shot-laser dynamic as seen in Donpachi and Dodonpachi are also present, with spread bombs and laser bombs also making a return. However, there are only 2 ships, a narrow shot ship (Type-A) and a wide shot ship (Type-B). In addition, the game introduces Element Dolls, which will power up the player's weapons. The element dolls are:

  • Shotia: Powers up standard shots and has a less powerful laser. Can carry 3 bombs at the start, and holds a maximum of 6.
  • Leinyan: Powers up laser shots and has a weaker shot attack. Can carry 2 bombs at the start, and holds a maximum of 4.
  • EXY: Powers up both shot and laser weapons, giving them intense power. Can carry 1 bomb at the start, and holds a maximum of 2.
  • Piper: Exclusive to the Xbox 360 in X-mode, Piper will fire hyper versions of the shot and laser, rapidly increasing the combo gauge. The player can still gain and activate hypers, but they make the shots green and give the player the ability to cancel bullets with their shots. To compensate, the player cannot use bombs (although the MAXIMUM bonus for obtaining bomb items is still intact).

Introduced in this game and carried on in later entries is the Hyper system. By gaining large combos, attacking enemies at close range, and collecting bee medals while a large combo is active (Bee medals now give score based on how large of a combo is racked up), you build up a hyper meter at the top of the screen. When the meter fills up, a hyper powerup drops from the bottom of the screen. Activating the hyper will cancel all bullets currently onscreen and increases the firepower of your shot and laser. Hypers also increase the rate of which combos are built up, as small enemies will give more hits on the combo gauge, larger enemies will add to the current combo chain much faster, and combos on bosses build up at a much faster rate. In addition, if a hyper meter is filled during a boss fight, all bullets on screen are cancelled and turned into score bonuses.

Plot

edit

After the events of Dodonpachi, in which the pilot stops Colonel Schwarlitz Longhener's plan to annihilate humanity, the remains of the Donpachi Corps are sealed away in the moon, never to be heard from again. 1000 years later, the robotic army, led by Hibachi, have reawakened and are slowly rebuilding itself in order to wipe out humanity again, taking the defenseless moon colony of Lunapolis. The world quickly resurrects the Donpachi Corps, and aided by Element Dolls, sentient androids meant to increase a ship's power, are deployed on the moon to destroy Hibachi's army.

Depending on the element doll the player chose at the beginning of the game, the ending will differ upon defeating Hibachi;

  • Shotia: In a last resort attack, Hibachi's program turns into a virus and invades Shotia's system, slowly deleting her memories bit by bit. Shotia's last memories are those with her pilot, and she dies with a smile.
  • Leinyan: After defeating Hibachi, Leinyan has developed feeling for her pilot. Upon returning to Earth, Leinyan is taken away to be experimented on, but escaped and reunites with her pilot.
  • EXY: EXY shuts down Hibachi's computer network, but was driven insane due to the overflow of data. EXY kills her pilot and does not return to Earth. The events of this game will eventually lead to Dodonpachi Daifukkatsu.

Development

edit

Black Label

edit

This variant was a limited edition release. The arcade board includes the original and Black Label games, which can be selected during boot time. The Black Label game can be identified by the black title screen. After the release of the Black label, the original version is called White Label, particularly for clarification.

A prototype export/overseas version of the Black Label edition named DoDonPachi III was discovered in 2016.[4]

Music

edit

The music tracks are puns of shooting game companies. Mukei is named after NMK, Toua is named after Toaplan, Takimi is named after Takumi Corporation, Torejya is named after Treasure, Saikyou is named after Psikyo, Seibu is named after Seibu Kaihatsu, Sakusetsu is named after Success Corporation, Taitou is named after Taito, Raijin is named after 8ing/Raizing, and Awaremu is named after Irem.

As often pointed out by fans, Manabu Namiki[5] confirmed that the tracks from the game are the shooting game companies stated above he wanted to show respect for.

Graphics

edit

With Junya Inoue still a graphical designer, the serene steampunk world of Progear has been replaced with hard sci-fi. The graphic style, especially the ships were drawn so as to resemble the original Dodonpachi. Bullets are drawn in blue and pink, and many of the backgrounds are deliberately flat so as not to distract from the on-screen action.[5]

Releases

edit

PlayStation 2 release

edit

This version added the following modes/features:

  • Death Label arcade mode.
  • No bullets mode
  • Simulation (training) mode, with a replay feature.
  • Gallery.
  • High score DVD video from 4 players who completed the second loop of the game.
  • Player : 長田仙人, KTL-NAL (A.K.A. Homestay Akira), Clover-TAC
  • Score : 1.89 Billion
  • Death Label mode

Death Label mode sets the player against a boss rush, with maximum firepower at all times and a full stock of Hyper granted before each boss. Death Label's difficulty is roughly equivalent to that of the normal game's second loop, with a number of alterations made to the bosses and their attack pattern.[citation needed] The most notable change is made at the final boss fight of Death Label, where the player faces two Hibachis simultaneously. According to top players, this is the most difficult iteration in the DoDonPachi series taking 7 years (from 2003 until 2010-09-18) to clear.[6][7][8]

Tamashii

edit

This edition is aimed at the Taiwan-Chinese market and some in-game text has been translated in Chinese. It features an easy mode for beginners (not Black Label). It was published by IGS on April 20, 2010.

Black Label EXTRA release

edit

The 2008-03-07 issue of Famitsu Weekly magazine reported that 5pb. Inc.'s 5pb.Games Division #2 would bring this game to the Xbox 360 platform as an Xbox Live Arcade title. However, 5pb representative Masaki Sakari claimed that Microsoft rejected 5pb's proposals and 'decided to cut down faithful arcade ports.'.[9] 5pb considered releasing Black Label and Ketsui on a retail DVD instead.

On 2008-09-26, Famitsu announced the official title of the Xbox 360 version of the game, dodonpachi DAI-OU-JOU Black Label EXTRA (怒首領蜂 大往生 ブラックレーベル EXTRA), scheduled for a release on Christmas Day of 2008. The port includes the original and Black Label editions of the game, as well as online score ranking, replay saving, enhanced graphics, and Xbox Live Marketplace content. There is an Xbox 360 original mode for beginners named the "X Mode", where a new Element Doll named Piper is introduced.[10]

The pre-order also includes a guidebook.

Arcade mode - Old Version - is a port of the original "White Label" arcade release.

Arcade mode - New Version - is a port of the newer "Black Label" arcade release.

The X Mode features a 1-loop, 5-stage layout with a new game system.

The game's music can be changed from Mono (from the arcade), Stereo, or X Mode, which features rearranged music.

Xbox achievements feature 50 categories for 1,000 points in total.[11]

The player can get extra credits, X mode, and unlock Config EX options that alter gameplay mechanics by playing the game for a specific amount of time or earning achievement points.

The Xbox 360 version was plagued at released with bugs and problems that rendered the game highly inaccurate and glitchy. It was eventually found that 5pb had, without permission, lifted the source code from the PS2 version of the game and slotted it in for the 360 version while making adjustments as needed. Patches were eventually made with Cave and Microsoft stepping in to aid the patching process.[12]

Reception

edit

In Japan, Game Machine listed DoDonPachi DaiOuJou on their June 1, 2002 issue as being the third most-popular arcade game during the previous two weeks.[24] DaiOuJou was met with positive reception from critics since its release in arcades and other platforms.[1][15][16] According to review aggregator site Metacritic, the iOS version received "generally favorable" reviews.[13] Famitsu reported that the PlayStation 2 and Xbox 360 versions sold over 19,593 and 10,526 copies in their first week on the market respectively.[25] Both the PlayStation 2 and Xbox 360 versions sold approximately 53,881 copies combined during their lifetime in Japan.[25]

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Ported to PlayStation 2 by Arika, Xbox 360 by 5pb. Inc.
  2. ^ PlayStation 2 port was published by Arika, Tamashii version was published by IGS and iOS port was published by Cave
  3. ^ Japanese: 怒首領蜂 大往生, Hepburn: Dodonpachi Daiōjō, lit. "DoDonPachi Peaceful Death" or "DoDonPachi Blissful Death", also known as DonPachi Episode 4 or DoDonPachi III

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "Japon: Arcade (Cave/Été) - Dodonpachi Daiojo". Consoles + [fr] (in French). No. 125. M.E.R.7 [fr]. June 2002. p. 40.
  2. ^ "Resuscitation of Bullet Hell shooting! DODONPACHI BLISSFUL DEATH for iPhone / IPod touch - CAVE WORLD". Archived from the original on 2012-01-23. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
  3. ^ "THE CAVE OF SHOOTING - 2002 - dodonpachi DAI-OU-JOU". www.world-of-arcades.net. Retrieved 2022-01-28.
  4. ^ "MAMEWorld Forums - News - Dodonpachi III, a version of DOJ between white and black labels".
  5. ^ a b "THE CAVE OF SHOOTING - 2002 - dodonpachi DAI-OU-JOU". www.world-of-arcades.net. Retrieved 2018-02-23.
  6. ^ "神の不在証明".
  7. ^ "怒首領蜂大往生 - クソゲーまとめ @ ウィキ(跡地)".
  8. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "PS2版『怒首領蜂 大往生』 デスレーベル". YouTube.
  9. ^ "XBLAH!: 5pb - 'XBLA rejected Ketsui and Dodonpachi'". Archived from the original on 2008-04-09. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  10. ^ 新エレメントドールが登場するオリジナルモードを搭載 『怒首領蜂 大往生 ブラックレーベル EXTRA』 - ファミ通_com
  11. ^ "怒首領蜂 大往生 : Features".
  12. ^ "Buggy Shooter Port Makes Game Exec Want to die (Not Really Die!)". 26 February 2010.
  13. ^ a b "DoDonPachi Blissful Death for iPhone/iPad Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. 9 February 2012. Archived from the original on 2020-10-07. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  14. ^ Pinsof, Allistair (17 February 2021). "Review: DoDonPachi Blissful Death". Destructoid. Enthusiast Gaming. Archived from the original on 2016-05-06. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  15. ^ a b "NEW GAMES CROSS REVIEW: 怒首領蜂 大往生 (PS2)". Famitsu (in Japanese). No. 745. Enterbrain. 28 March 2003. Archived from the original on 2020-06-18. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  16. ^ a b Ebihara, Leona; Yoshiike, Maria; Yamamoto, Penki; Sugashi, Kawada (11 February 2009). "NEW GAMES CROSS REVIEW: 怒首領蜂 大往生 ブラックレーベル EXTRA (Xbox 360)". Famitsu (in Japanese). No. 1054. Enterbrain. Archived from the original on 2019-12-18. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  17. ^ Brown, Mark (10 February 2012). "Game Review (iOS): DoDonPachi Blissful Death". Pocket Gamer. Steel Media. Archived from the original on 2020-10-25. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  18. ^ Nelson, Jared (15 February 2012). "'Dodonpachi Blissful Death' Review – Another Day, Another Fantastic Cave Shooter". TouchArcade. MacRumors. Archived from the original on 2019-11-01. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  19. ^ Thomas, Rob (14 February 2012). "DoDonPachi Blissful Death Review". 148Apps. Steel Media. Archived from the original on 2019-11-01. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  20. ^ Byron, Paul (9 February 2012). "DoDonPachi Blissful Death". AppGamer. Hexademic New Media. Archived from the original on 2012-03-06. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  21. ^ Chan, Clayton (13 May 2003). "DoDonPachi Dai-Ou-Jou - PlayStation 2 Review". Netjak. Archived from the original on 2003-08-03. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  22. ^ Oxford, Nadia (10 February 2012). "DoDonPachi Blissful Death Review". Slide To Play. Slide To Play, Inc. Archived from the original on 2012-03-14. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  23. ^ Wood, Nigel (9 February 2012). "DoDonPachi Blissful Death review - DoDonPachi returns in prequel form, in yet another stellar 'bullet hell' title from CAVE". TouchGen. Archived from the original on 2012-02-11. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  24. ^ "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. 659. Amusement Press, Inc. 1 June 2002. p. 17.
  25. ^ a b "Game Search". Game Data Library. Archived from the original on 2021-01-29. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
edit