Muchi-Muchi Pork

Muchi-Muchi Pork is a Bullet Hell Shoot'Em Up by CAVE. The game is notable for being programmed by S. Yagawa, who also worked on many 8ing/Raizing games such as Battle Garegga and Armed Police Batrider.

General Pork Fillet, a military dictator from a faraway planet, is angry that people on Earth are starting to prefer eating beef instead pork. So, he launches a full invasion and turns a number of people into pig-people. Three heroines must pilot prototype flying militarized exercise bikes and stop him:

  • Momo (Muchi Muchi Pink): She kept promising herself that she would start dieting, but always put it off until later.
  • Ikuo (Muchi Muchi Blue): She is a high school softball player who enjoys eating a lot of meat after every game.
  • Rafute (Muchi Muchi Yellow): Her family recently moved to an unfamiliar place. This made her feel nervous enough to start eating a lot.

A region-free port for the Xbox 360 was released in a double-pack with Pink Sweets.

Tropes used in Muchi-Muchi Pork include:
  • Acrofatic: Ikuo (Muchi Muchi Blue) is good at sports, especially baseball, she just happens to enjoy eating a lot afterwards.
  • Big Beautiful Woman: Just look at the page picture. While the main characters aren't fat, they're definitely filled out in the right places and then some.
  • Call a Hit Point a Smeerp: Power-up is now "Pork Up".
  • Chainsaw Good: Momo's (Muchi Muchi Pink's) lard weapon is a pair of gigantic chainsaws, and Rafute's (Muchi Muchi Yellow's) lard weapon is a homing buzzsaw
  • Creator Cameo: One of the bosses is voiced by MASA-KING, the frontman for Cave's mobile games division and who also composes a few songs for various Cave games. Another boss is voiced by Daisuke Matsumoto, another frequent Cave musical collaborator.
  • Cute'Em Up: Notable for mixing this style with the more typical military/techno shmup aesthetic. It's as if a cute-em-up was attacking the world of a typical shmup, or the other way around, or, uhh, yeah, Widget Series, enough said.
  • Dynamic Difficulty: This game has the rank mechanic.
  • Equal Opportunity Evil: General Pork Fillet's underlings include a chicken, bull, lamb/ram and horse.
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: Another way to pronounce the title of the game is "Much, Much Pork". The player characters are pig-girls, the enemy vehicles are piloted by Imperial Japan esque pig soldiers, the final boss is a pig general named Pork Fillet, the planet is surrounded by a giant series of sausage links, the collectibles are pigs, the options are flying pigs, the act of powering up is now called "Pork Up" instead, high-scoring is based on using a lard cannon, and on and on.
    • "Muchi" is also a Japanese word referring to a woman who is built like the heroines (plump, but in a curvaceous way).
  • Gotta Catch Em All: This game has medal chaining, and the characters will comment if the chain is broken.
  • Humanoid Female Animal: The three player characters are pig-girls.
  • Humongous Mecha: The bombs summon these, complete with the mecha doing funny dances/poses!
  • I'm a Humanitarian: General Pork Fillet comes from a planet where intelligent life evolved from pigs, but he nevertheless believes that eating pork is the best thing that someone could do. He even gets angry at the people of Earth for not feeling the same way.
  • Mythology Gag: The final boss has a few things in common with that of Battle Garegga, another game programmed by S. Yagawa.
  • Raygun Gothic: The heroines wield retro rayguns.
  • Stealth Pun: Numerous:
    • The cow/bull officer has big beefy muscles.
    • The horse officer commands a fast-moving ground vehicle.
  • Super Prototype: The militarized exercise bikes have barely had any test flights.
  • This Is a Drill: Ikuo's (Muchi Muchi Blue's) lard weapon is a gigantic energy drill.
  • The Unfavorite: This game in comparison to other Cave games with the main reasons being Yagawa's trademark rank systems, the bugs and the sheer fact it's nothing like a typical Cave game (Yagawa games encourage rank control, bombing for score, strategic suicides and avoiding power ups). It shares this distinction with Ibara, another Yagawa-programmed game of Cave's.
  • Up to Eleven: Okay, we had giant mechanical bees and butterflies, people that can switch their gender at will, a shooter with disco music a several dozen feet tall toddler, games that were all about roses and candy and holiday-themed games. And this game is still weirder than all of those.
  • A Worldwide Punomenon: According to this review, there are also a number of Japanese pork puns in addition to the ones that are more evident in English.
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