Disney Tsum Tsum
Disney Tsum Tsum (Japanese: ディズニー ツムツム, Hepburn: Dizunī Tsumutsumu), pronounced "(t)soom (t)soom", is a range of Japanese collectible stuffed toys based upon Disney-owned characters.[1] The name is derived from the Japanese verb tsumu meaning "to stack", because the rectangle-shaped toys are designed to stack on top of each other, forming a pyramid shape.[1] There are also vinyl versions of them manufactured by Jakks Pacific.
Type | Stuffed toys |
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Company | The Walt Disney Company |
Country | Japan |
Availability | December 16, 2014–present |
Slogan | Collect 'em! Stack 'em! |
The toys were first released in Japan in 2013 as a tie-in to the Tsum Tsum arcade and mobile games respectively developed by Konami and Line Corporation. Disney began selling them in the United States in July 2014,[2] and in Disneyland Paris the following month. Around the same time, Disney released Tsum Tsum to the South Korean market, giving away icons for use on online chat systems.[3] As of 2014, 1.8 million Tsum Tsum toys have been sold.[4] As of February 2019, the franchise has reached around $2.5 billion in combined mobile game and merchandise sales revenue. Disney Tsum Tsum Festival, a party game based on the toyline developed by B.B. Studio and Hyde and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment, was released for Nintendo Switch in 2019.
Design
Tsum Tsum toys are typically made of felt, microbeads, and stuffing, although hard plastic models can also be found. They are ovular in shape, and vary in sizes. Initially, the toys were released in three different sizes: "mini" (3.5 inches (8.9 cm) long), "medium" (11 inches (28 cm)), and "large" (17 inches (43 cm)). In June 2014, a new "mega" size (21.5 inches (55 cm)) was released to the Japanese market. In October 2015, Disney announced a subscription-only "small" size (7.5 inches (19 cm)). In November 2015, during the Japanese D23 Expo, a new "micro" size (2 inches (5.1 cm)) was introduced.
Characters
Disney offers dozens of characters in the Tsum Tsum line. The line includes classic mainline characters like Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Daisy Duck, Chip 'n' Dale, Pluto and Goofy, as well as secondary Disney characters like Bambi, Pinocchio, Lady, Tramp, Tinker Bell, Cinderella, and others. Contemporary characters are also represented, including those from Lilo & Stitch, Winnie the Pooh, Toy Story, Monsters, Inc., Big Hero 6, The Aristocats, Phineas and Ferb, Star Wars, and Cars.[5]
Disney has also released alternate character representations for holidays and special events.[6][7][8][9][10]
On 1 August 2019, the original members of the English rock band Queen—Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Taylor, and John Deacon—were added to the Japanese version of the mobile game as Tsum Tsums, with the first three added as playable characters.[11] Selecting any of playable members in the game will have an instrumental version of their respectively written signature songs playing in the background;[11] Mercury features "We Are the Champions", May features "We Will Rock You", and Taylor features "Radio Ga Ga". The band appears in the game as representatives for the 2018 20th Century Fox film Bohemian Rhapsody.[11] The Tsums are exclusive to the Japanese version only.[11]
There is also a CGI animated short series featuring the characters.
Mobile games
Disney Tsum Tsum
Disney Tsum Tsum | |
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Standard Disney Tsum Tsum icon. Characters around the Mickey Mouse Tsum (clockwise from upper-left): Perry, Pooh, Donald Duck, and Piglet. | |
Developer(s) | Line |
Publisher(s) | Line |
Platform(s) | iOS, Android |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Puzzle |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Disney Tsum Tsum (promoted as LINE: Disney Tsum Tsum) is a free-to-play mobile puzzle game for iOS and Android developed and published by Line Corporation. The game focuses on Disney, Pixar, and Star Wars characters rendered as Tsum Tsum toys. The game is divided between two different versions which differ in content; the original Japanese version, and a separate global version. Both versions are regularly updated separately from one another. The game requires a constant Internet connection to play.
As of April 2017, the game had surpassed 70 million downloads and grossed over $1 billion in gross revenue, bringing total franchise revenue to $2 billion when including merchandise sales (which generated around $1 billion ).[12] As of February 4, 2019, the game reached $1.5 billion in lifetime revenue, of which 96% came from Japan,[13] bringing total franchise revenue to around $2.5 billion including merchandise sales.
Gameplay
The game's story is that Disney Tsum Tsum toys have fallen from the shelves of the Disney Store overnight and need to be put back on the shelves before the store opens. Players must drag their finger on their phone's touchscreen to connect at least three Tsums in order to clear them from the playfield, clearing as many Tsums as possible before time runs out. As Tsums are cleared, players score points, and more of the toys fall in from above. Players score more points (as well as coins to buy new Tsums and raise their score level caps) when clearing four or more tsums at a time. Clearing at least seven Tsums (six when a specific boost is activated before a game) will also spawn a magical bubble (known as a bomb in the Japanese version) that immediately clears surrounding Tsums when tapped to pop them. As Tsums are cleared, they fill up a "Fever Meter" that, when full, triggers a ten-second "Fever Mode", which adds five seconds of playtime to the timer, clears away Tsums faster, and temporarily prevent combos from breaking. In addition, clearing "MyTsums" (a Tsum that players select before each game) fills a meter that allows players to use their MyTsum's special ability.
There are two types of Tsums: Happiness Box Tsums and Premium Box Tsums. Happiness Boxes, which cost 10,000 coins each, contain one of fourteen Tsums from the Mickey & Friends, Chip 'n' Dale, or Winnie the Pooh franchises. Premium Boxes contain one of an ever-increasing number of Tsums, most of which are earned by spending 30,000 coins each, although some of these Tsums can only be earned via specific methods or events, not through a Premium Box purchase. Premium Box Tsums have stronger skills than the Happiness Box Tsums and usually have a skill level cap of six (Happiness Box Tsums have a skill level cap of just three). Also, for certain periods of time, there may be a second option for purchasing Premium Box Tsums in either Pick-Up Capsules (called Pick-Up Gachas in the Japanese version) or Select Boxes. Pick-Up Capsules contain fifteen or twenty specific Tsums for players to earn, with players being awarded a Skill Ticket—an item that allows players to increase the skill levels of any Tsum that they already have in their collection for free—if they empty the dispenser before its availability period ends. Select Boxes contain upwards of ten or twelve Tsums, providing an increased chance of winning Tsums available in such boxes compared to buying them in the regular Premium Boxes.
Players also have in-game bingo cards that award prizes when certain optional missions are completed. Completing a row, column or diagonal line of optional missions for bingo will award players various minor prizes, while completing an entire card will earn players tickets for free Tsums (without having to spend coins), special Tsums (including those that cannot be earned through regular means, such as Oswald the Lucky Rabbit or the Alien from Toy Story), or Skill Tickets, depending on the card. Various time-limited events also award similar prizes through completing separate sets of missions.
Playing a round of Disney Tsum Tsum costs one "heart" (life). Hearts can be earned by waiting fifteen minutes to refill (up to five hearts in total; any more than four stockpiled hearts will disable refilling until players have less than five hearts again), completing bingos or event missions, spending "Rubies" (the game's premium currency that can be purchased through microtransactions or earned through either leveling up or completing bingos), or by sending hearts to Line and Facebook friends who are logged into the game. Players can send one free heart to each friend per hour. Sending hearts do not cost any players their own hearts. Claiming a heart within an hour of being sent will also award players 200 coins.
Marvel Tsum Tsum
Marvel Tsum Tsum | |
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Developer(s) | XFLAG |
Publisher(s) | XFLAG |
Platform(s) | iOS, Android |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | Puzzle |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Marvel Tsum Tsum was a free-to-play mobile puzzle game for iOS and Android developed by XFLAG and published by mixi. The game focuses on Marvel characters rendered as Tsum Tsum toys. Despite having similar gameplay, the game is unrelated to Line Corporation's Disney Tsum Tsum. The game was released worldwide on August 31, 2016 and was shut down on October 31, 2017.[14]
References
- Kelli Bender (11 August 2014). "Attention Christmas Shoppers: Disney's Tsum Tsum Could Be the Next Beanie Baby Craze". People. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
- ""Disney Tsum Tsum" Mobile Game And Soft Toy Line Launch Globally" (Press release). Burbank, California: Disney Interactive. PR Newswire. 2017-07-01. Retrieved 2017-02-24.
- 라인 디즈니 썸썸. Disney Korea (in Korean). Disney Korea. Archived from the original on December 23, 2014.
- Brooks Barnes (10 August 2014). "Sensing a Tsum Tsum Craze Afoot, Disney Rushes to Supply Fans". New York Times. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
- Fiedler, Dan Brace and Jon. "Max Goof (Mickey & Friends) at Tsum Tsum Central". www.tsumtsumcentral.com.
- "Disney welcomes 2015 with special edition sheep Tsum Tsum soft toys!". Rocketnews24.com. 14 December 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
- "Honeypot Winnie The Pooh Tsum Tsum Set Coming To Japan". Diskingdom.com. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
- "New Candy Tsum Tsum Collectors Set Coming Soon To Japan". Diskingdom.com. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
- "Dale Tsum Tsum Plush – Mini – 3 1/2". Disney.com. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
- "4顔セット TSUM TSUM ドナルド" (in Japanese). The Disney Store, Japan. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
- "Queen's Classic Line-Up To Appear As Tsums In Japan". uDiscoverMusic. 31 July 2019. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
- Chapple, Craig (July 3, 2017). "Line's mobile puzzler Disney Tsum Tsum racks up $1 billion in lifetime revenue". Pocket Gamer.
- Nelson, Randy (February 4, 2019). "Nintendo's Dr. Mario World Developer Built a Disney Puzzle Game That Just Made $1.5 Billion". Sensor Tower. Retrieved February 13, 2019.
- "Thank you for playing MARVEL Tsum Tsum". Marvel Tsum Tsum. Archived from the original on 4 September 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017.