Dizzy (series)

A series of Action-Adventure games released in the UK during the mid 1980s to early 1990s.

The games concern the various adventures of Dizzy, a member of a race of egg-people called the Yolkfolk who live in a High Fantasy world of dragons, trolls and treetop villages. Most of his adventures involved saving his fellow Yolkfolk from peril or escaping a dangerous land.

To solve his various problems Dizzy picks up a variety of strange items and when he's found the proper place to use them, drops them again. As he can only carry a few items at a time, though, the player is frequently forced to walk from one side of the map to the other to get something useful.

Fantasy World Dizzy, the third game in the series, is famously adored by Ben Croshaw - if ironicly and through a heavy dose of Nostalgia Filter. (He does a Let's Play of the game on his blog: Part 1, Part 2.) Stuart Ashen is a fan of Treasure Island Dizzy, the second game in the series, as he points out here.


Games in this series

The main games of the series are all adventure games:

  • Dizzy – The Ultimate Cartoon Adventure (June, 1987)
  • Treasure Island Dizzy (August, 1987)
  • Fantasy World Dizzy (1989)
  • Magicland Dizzy (1990)
  • Spellbound Dizzy (1990)
  • Fantastic Dizzy (1991)
  • Dizzy Prince of the Yolkfolk (December, 1991)
  • Crystal Kingdom Dizzy (1992)

There were also spin-off games, featuring Dizzy but belonging to other genres:

  • Fast Food (December, 1987). A Maze Game.
  • Kwik Snax (November, 1990). A Maze Game, sequel to the above.
  • Dizzy Panic! (May, 1990). A Puzzle Game.
  • Bubble Dizzy (November, 1990). Dizzy is captured by pirates and forced to Walk the Plank. Sinking to the bottom of the sea, Dizzy has to use bubbles to float back to the surface.
  • Dizzy Down the Rapids (April, 1991). Essentially an obstacle course game. Dizzy rides barrels down the river and has to avoid various hazzards.
  • The Excellent Dizzy Collection (November,1993)). Three stand-alone games released together.
    • Dizzy the Adventurer. Enhanced version of Dizzy Prince of the Yolkfolk.
    • Panic Dizzy. Essentially Dizzy Panic! under a new title.
    • Go! Dizzy Go!. A Maze Game.
The following tropes are common to many or all entries in the Dizzy (series) franchise.
For tropes specific to individual installments, visit their respective work pages.
  • Alliteration: All but one of the Yolkfolk; Dizzy, Daisy, Dora, Dylan, Denzil, Dozy... and Grand-Dizzy.
  • The Cameo: CJ, an elephant character from two Codemasters platform games, pops up in Crystal Kingdom Dizzy.
  • Cool Shades: Denzil wears them.
  • Damsel in Distress: Daisy's usual role. To some extent, the rest of the Yolkfolk.
  • Evil Twin: The Dizzy Doppleganger. In the Amiga games he's distinguished by having green gloves and and boots and glowing red eyes.
  • Fan Sequel: Several. One has Dizzy as a contestant on Knightmare!
  • Fetch Quest: Most of the games revolved around carrying objects from one end of the map to the other. This troper would start Magicland Dizzy by fetching as many items as possible and putting them in one room, just to save time and annoyance later.
    • The official helpline ("calls cost 36p per minute during off peak time") even recommended doing this; specifically in Prince Charming's throne room, which is more or less central.
    • In Spellbound Dizzy you need to be carrying rocks to access half the rooms. You have to have the right number for the room you want to access, you can't put them down or they smash... oh, but you have to put them down or you can't pick up anything else or exit the room. Roughly half the game is spent just going back and forth to get more rocks. ARG.
      • Of course, you could always put them down on something soft that won't smash them...
        • That's not much help when you're down the mine shaft, where there ARE no soft surfaces...
    • The Grand Finale of almost every single game usually involves a map-long Fetch Quest from one end to the other, usually as far as it's possible to go, and usually back again. (Magic Land, for example; go to Hades, get Wizardslayer Trident; traverse map to the top of the Ice Tower, use Trident, get Zaks' Ring; traverse map back to The Cracks Of Gehenna, throw Ring into lava. Then start hunting for the Last Lousy Diamond...)
  • Follow the Leader: Dizzy's success led to many similar arcade adventure games, a lot of them also published by Codemasters. Examples include Murray Mouse: Supercop, Spike in Transilvania (sic) and the Seymour series.
  • Gaiden Game: This series got some very odd spinoffs, including Fast Food (a sort of Pac-Man clone) and Dizzy Down The Rapids (a Toobin' clone.)
  • Game Breaking Bug (or possibly a Good Bad Bug): Treasure Island Dizzy in particular would sometimes misload, giving you mysterious floating scenery, jumbled music and holes in the floor. You could still walk around and explore, but would inevitably end up either freezing the game or falling through one of the holes and tumbling through the sky forever.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: Egg-related puns feature heavily in the games, to the point of eggstreme eggsasperation.
  • Interface Screw: You travel through the looking glass for a couple of screens in Magic Land Dizzy, and the left-right controls promptly switch.
    • Similarly in Fantasy Land Dizzy there's an upside down world. Of course if you're using a PC emulator, you can just Ctrl-Alt-Down your screen to flip it...
  • Inventory Management Puzzle: Pervades throughout the series, but the strict FIFO system in Treasure Island Dizzy is particularly heinous.
    • Especially as a bug in the system would occasionally make you drop two items at once... bye bye snorkel *drowns*
  • Last Lousy Point: Even if you solve all the puzzles, most of the games require you to find thirty gold coins, or magic diamonds, or cherries, or something to get the real ending. You're required to use the pick up command on everything in sight to find some of them, which could be hidden behind a completely innocuous roof shingle or patch of grass.
    • Done rather insidiously in a few games where the tokens you need are also what refill your life bar, so you probably won't be picking them up if you're at 100% health.
  • The Merch: At the peak of Dizzy's popularity, the game inlays offered Dizzy merchandise including t-shirts, baseball caps and clocks for sale by mail order.
  • Metroidvania
  • New Age Retro Hippie: Dylan's entire characterization.
  • Nintendo Hard: Spellbound Dizzy in particular, see that page for details
  • One-Hit-Point Wonder: In the early games anything dangerous was automatically lethal to Dizzy. Later games gave him a life bar but it went down really fast.
    • The second game, Treasure Island Dizzy, was foul with this. You're a One Hit Point Wonder with One Life - anything dangerous is instant End Of Game. Including those wretched cage traps hidden off screen in the trees.
  • Parental Bonus: In Crystal Kingdom Dizzy, Dizzy's girlfriend Daisy complains that he "messed up" her bedroom. Then once you get in there, you find a whip...
  • Portable Hole: you can pick one up, but as soon as you pick it up - and store it in your bag - there's a hole in your bag, so everything falls out of it. Including the hole.
  • Promoted to Unlockable: Daisy becomes a playable character in Dizzy Down the Rapids.
  • Shout-Out: Various, ranging from the works of J. Milton Hayes, to the rest of the Code Masters library, to pretty much every Fairy Tale ever written.
    • Magic Land Dizzy has a clever little puzzle that references Pac-Man.
      • Not to mention the Billy Goats Gruff, Alice in Wonderland, Lord of the Rings, Aladdin, the legend of King Arthur, the Pied Piper of Hamlyn, the Frog Prince, the Wizard of Oz, Sleeping Beauty and probably at least one more that's been forgotten. Seriously. EVERY Fairy Tale ever written is in these games somewhere. That list is just one game and there's a dozen of these things.
  • Spiritual Successor: Seymour Goes to Hollywood was initially conceived as a Dizzy game, until it was decided that Dizzy didn't belong in a real world setting. Several more Seymour games followed in the same formula as the Dizzy adventures.
  • Super Drowning Skills: Treasure Island Dizzy introduced a snorkel, which sort of helps.
    • Unless you accidentally drop it underwater, of course.
  • Sure Why Not: The Oliver Twins said Dizzy was never supposed to be an egg, just a face with hands and feet. But after the first game was released and everyone thought he was an egg, they decided to go with that, and created the rest of the Yolkfolk.
  • Throw It In: Dizzy's trademark somersaulting jump action was just the result of the Oliver Twins faffing around with the rotate function in their paint program.
  • Traveling Pipe Bulge: Spellbound Dizzy
  • Waddling Head: Dizzy and the rest of the Yolk Folk.
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