Toy Pop

Toy Pop (トイポップ, Toi Poppu) is a multi-directional shooter arcade game that was released by Namco in 1986. It runs on Namco Libble Rabble hardware, and was also the only game that the company released in their last 8-bit year that did not use a Yamaha YM2151 FM sound chip. The game was later rereleased as part of Namco Museum Vol. 1 for the original Sony PlayStation in 1995.

Toy Pop
Arcade flyer
Developer(s)Namco
Publisher(s)Namco
Composer(s)Junko Ozawa
Platform(s)Arcade, Wii (Virtual Console)
ReleaseArcade
  • JP: April 1986
Wii Virtual Console
  • JP: November 24, 2009
Genre(s)Multi-directional shooter
Mode(s)Up to 2 players simultaneously
Arcade systemNamco Libble Rabble

Gameplay

Screenshot of the game

Toy Pop is a top-down multi-directional shooter that can be played both single-player or with two players simultaneously. The players venture through 44 floors (the game uses the toy-themed term "Box" as opposed to "Floor", to fit with the game's setting) collecting four gold hearts contained in jars on each floor in order to advance. Along the way, the players must open gift-wrapped containers concealing either weapons or score-increasing bonus items; these various weapons are used to defeat several different varieties of enemies (Heitai, Cars, Tanks, Domdoms, Trumps, Osaru, Robots and occasionally the evil wizard Mahou), with many typically vulnerable to only one type of weapon.

Plot

The game's backstory is that two dolls, Pino and Acha, have gone into the castle of the witch Majyo who has kidnapped their friends. The game's opening cutscene reads "PINO AND ACHA ARE GOING TO MAJYO'S CASTLE TO SAVE FRIEND" before gameplay begins. The game culminates with a battle against Majyo on the 44th floor, who can only be defeated by collecting the hearts that appear in random places around the room.

Release

To promote the game's 1986 release, Namco distributed yellow flyers to Japanese arcade establishments. These flyers presented information regarding the game, such as the rules of the game, pictures of the in-game enemies, and a single full-colored screenshot of Toy Pop's gameplay in the middle of the page. This flyer also included retail information such as the Toy Pop arcade machine's 93000-Yen price.

Stationery bearing Toy Pop artwork was also released. Two known designs that were featured include one that was a reproduction of the game's opening cutscene described in the above section, and the other being artwork of several of the game's characters grouped together.

Reception

In Japan, Game Machine listed Toy Pop on their June 1, 1986 issue as being the twentieth most-successful table arcade unit of the year.[1]

References

  1. "Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - テーブル型TVゲーム機 (Table Videos)". Game Machine (in Japanese). No. 285. Amusement Press, Inc. 1 June 1986. p. 21.
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