词条 | Bonk's Adventure |
释义 |
|title=Bonk's Adventure |image=bonkadventure.jpg |developer=Red Company/Atlus Factor 5 (Amiga) A.I. Company Ltd. (NES) |publisher={{vgrelease|JP|Hudson Soft}}{{vgrelease|NA|NEC Home Electronics}} |series=Bonk |platforms=TurboGrafx-16 (original) NES, Game Boy, Amiga, Arcade, Wii, Wii U |released={{vgrelease|NA|1990|JP|December 15, 1989}}Virtual Console Wii {{Video game release|NA|November 22, 2006}}Wii U {{Video game release|NA|July 14, 2016}} |genre=2D side scrolling platform |modes=Single-player |designer= |composer=Tsukasa Masuko Kunio Komatsu (NES) }} Bonk's Adventure is a 2D platform video game developed by Red Company and Atlus as the first game in the Bonk series that was released in 1989 in Japan and 1990 in North America for the TurboGrafx-16. In Japan it was released as {{nihongo|PC Genjin|PC原人}} in 1989, a play on the Japanese name for the system, 'PC Engine'. The game was re-released for the TurboGrafx-16 in the U.S. in 1992 on the Gate of Thunder 4-in-1 game CD-ROM. The game was later ported to the NES, Amiga and arcade systems under different titles (FC Genjin and BC Genjin). A completely different game with the same name appeared on the Game Boy (under the title GB Genjin in Japan). It is also available through Nintendo's Virtual Console service, on the PlayStation Store and there is a version for mobile phones in Japan. StoryThe game's protagonist is Bonk, a strong and bald caveboy who battles anthropomorphic dinosaurs and other prehistoric themed enemies. Bonk's mission is to rescue Princess Za (a small pink Pleisiosaur-type reptile) who has been kidnapped by the evil King Drool (a large, green, Tyrannosaurus-type dinosaur).[1] In the Arcade version, Bonk is also assisted by a female version of himself.[2] GameplayBonk attacks enemies by "bonking" them with his large, invincible forehead. Bonk starts the game with three hearts' worth of health, which are depleted to blue as Bonk takes damage, and three extra lives. Bonk's health can be restored in increments by collecting fruits and vegetables. Bonk can also collect pieces of meat as power-ups; these lend him special abilities and make him stronger. There are three stages of power-up: his normal self, a second stage during which he can stun enemies by pounding on the ground, and a third stage where he becomes temporarily invulnerable. Meat can be found in two varieties: big meat and small meat. The effects of meat are additive but wear off over time. A small meat gives Bonk the second stage of meat power and a large one takes him to stage three. Eating a small meat while in stage two will also put Bonk into the third, invincible stage of meat power. When the third stage effect wears off he returns to the second state and remains there for a while before turning back to the regular Bonk. Eating either size of meat while in the third stage of meat power-up will reset the timer on Bonk's meat power. Bonk can occasionally collect red heart power-ups that refill an entire heart worth of health, or even more rarely, a large red heart, which restores all of Bonk's missing health. There are also two rare, blue heart power-ups in the game which will increase Bonk's maximum health by one heart. Bonking an enemy will typically knock it backward and slightly into the air. Defeating an enemy yields points and also releases a small "smiley" power-up. Bonk's smileys are totaled at the end of each stage after defeating the boss of that stage. The player is given additional points and a caveman type congratulation based on how many smileys were collected. Development and release historyThe Japanese name for the original game for the PC-Engine is PC-Genjin (PC原人, in English: PC-Caveman). In Japanese, PC-Genjin sounds like PC-Engine, and the PC stands for Pithecanthropus Computerus, a pun on Pithecanthropus Erectus. It is generally called PC-Kid in English, as he was meant to be NEC's mascot at the time. Later, when the game was ported (or given different versions) for other platforms, it was renamed accordingly, like FC-Kid (after Family Computer, the original Japanese name for the NES, and the FC stood for Freakthoropus Computerus), GB-Kid (after the Game Boy), or the more generic name BC-Kid in some other versions, including Amiga. In North America, this was scrapped, as the game name is always Bonk's Adventure or something similar. In 2003 Hudson Soft included a 3D remake of Bonk's Adventure in their Hudson Selection series of games released exclusively in Japan for the PlayStation 2 and GameCube consoles.[3] Factor 5, developers of the Amiga port, have made the Amiga version of BC-Kid available for free through their company website.[4]The TurboGrafx-16 version was released for Wii's Virtual Console on November 22, 2006, and according to informal surveys it has been one of the most purchased games.[5][6] In March 2008, a version for Mobile Phones was released in Japan. Hudson was developing a reboot of the franchise entitled "Bonk: Brink of Extinction" for WiiWare and PlayStation Network. With the closure of Hudson the status and future of this title is uncertain.
On October 19, 2015, it was announced that Bonk's Adventure was given a rating on the Virtual Console for Wii U for a future release,[7][8] though it is unknown if this means the revival of TurboGrafx-16 on the Wii U Virtual Console (outside Japan) or the port of Bonk's Adventure on the NES. Although the rating also points out to the releases on the Wii, PlayStation 3, and PSP hinting it is the TurboGrafx-16 version. After months of rumors, the game finally saw a Wii U release in its TurboGrafx-16 form on July 14, 2016.[9] ReceptionEntertainment Weekly picked the game as the #3 greatest game available in 1991, saying: "NEC stakes out some odd historical territory with this game, which features a runty caveman who uses his head, literally, to bonk his enemies into oblivion. Cute, cartoony, and highly imaginative, this is one of the rare games that’s as much fun to watch as it is to play."[10]References1. ^{{cite web|title=Bonk's Adventure|url=http://bonkzonk.com/game.ktn?Game=pcg|work=The Bonk Compendium|accessdate=1 July 2010}} 2. ^{{cite web|title=Bonk's Adventure - Arcade Version|url=http://bonkzonk.com/game.ktn?Game=kpcg|work=The Bonk Compendium|accessdate=1 July 2010}} 3. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.gamespot.com/ps2/action/bonksadventure/news.html?sid=6076053&mode=previews |title= TGS 2003: Bonk's Adventure Impressions |accessdate=2006-12-20 |last= Shoemaker |first= Brad |date= 2003-09-27 |work= GameSpot |publisher= CNet}} 4. ^{{cite web |url=http://factor5.com/downloads.shtml |title= Factor 5 Classics page |accessdate=2008-01-05}} 5. ^https://www.nintendo.com/games/detail/1gxEiPxZ-WivnWlULoSJVl4Tyy-ary_k 6. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.joystiq.com/2006/12/06/turbografx-the-most-downloaded-virtual-console-games/ |title= TurboGrafx the most downloaded Virtual Console games? (sic) |accessdate=2006-12-20 |last= Snow |first= Blake |date= 2006-12-06 |work= Joystiq |publisher= Weblogs, Inc.}} 7. ^{{cite web|author1=Liam Doolan|title=Bonk's Adventure Has Been Rated By The ESRB For Wii U|url=http://www.nintendolife.com/news/2015/10/bonks_adventure_has_been_rated_by_the_esrb_for_wii_u|accessdate=19 October 2015|date=October 19, 2015}} 8. ^{{cite web|author1=ESRB|title=ESRB Rating (Bonk's Adventure)|url=http://esrb.org/ratings/Synopsis.aspx?logoonly=1&Certificate=22170&Title=Bonk%27s%20Adventure=|accessdate=19 October 2015|date=October 19, 2015}} 9. ^https://www.nintendo.com/games/detail/bonks-adventure-wii-u 10. ^https://ew.com/article/1991/11/22/video-games-guide/ External links
18 : TurboGrafx-16 games|Nintendo Entertainment System games|Game Boy games|Amiga games|Arcade games|Virtual Console games|Mobile games|GameCube games|PlayStation 2 games|IOS games|PlayStation Network games|Side-scrolling platform games|1989 video games|Red Entertainment games|Atlus games|Bonk video games|Single-player video games|Video games developed in Japan |
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