Bubble Symphony

Bubble Symphony (バブルシンフォニー, Baburu Shinfonī), also known as Bubble Bobble II (バブルボブルII, Baburu Boburu II), is an arcade video game in the Bubble Bobble series developed by Taito in 1994.[2] While being a new Bubble Bobble for a new generation, in actuality it takes place after Parasol Stars.

Bubble Symphony
Arcade flyer
Developer(s)Taito
Publisher(s)Taito
SeriesBubble Bobble
Platform(s)Arcade, Sega Saturn, Xbox (Taito Legends 2), Microsoft Windows (Taito Legends 2), PlayStation 2 (Taito Memories II Volume 2)
ReleaseArcade
October 5, 1994 (Version 2.5)
Sega Saturn
November 27, 1997
Genre(s)Platform game
Mode(s)Up to 2 players simultaneously
CabinetUpright
Arcade systemTaito F3 System
Main CPU: 68EC020 (@ 16 MHz)
SoundSound CPU: 68000 (@ 16 MHz)
Sound Chips: ES5505 (@ 15.23805 MHz)[1]
DisplayRaster resolution 320×224 (Horizontal) Palette Colors 8192

Gameplay

Screenshot of Bubble Symphony

For this adventure, Bubblun and Bobblun, the familiar green and blue bubble dragons, are joined by girls Kululun (an orange dragon) and Cororon (a purple dragon). However, they are stated to be the children of the Bub and Bob of the first game.[3]

According to the intro, the four characters (as humans) inadvertently unleash Hyper Drunk, the final boss, while reading books. Hyper Drunk transforms the four into bubble dragons and banishes them to a new world.[3][4]

Characters

  • Bubblun (バブルン, Baburun) is the well-rounded character; he can fire three grouped bubbles straight ahead when powered up (the bubble button is held for a few seconds then released).
  • Bobblun (ボブルン, Boburun) has faster speed in exchange for shorter range. He can shoot three bubbles in a spread pattern when powered up.
  • Kululun (クルルン, Kururun) has the longest available range, but is slow. She can shoot her bubbles in a "T" pattern (forwards, backwards, and down) when powered up.
  • Cororon (コロロン, Kororon) has the fastest bubble blowing and can shoot her bubbles in an inverted-"T" pattern (forwards, backwards, and up) when powered up.

Although a sequel to Bubble Bobble, the game inaugurates few changes to the gameplay formula of that title. The small changes that have been made are that a boss is now encountered every five to ten levels, giving those scenes a similar prominence to Rainbow Islands, and the player takes a branching route through the levels by selecting one of two doors after every boss. The players can now charge the bubble shot; if released when the dragon's horns or bow is glowing, he/she will breathe three bubbles at once, with the specific formation dependent on the character chosen. The players must collect certain square cards with music notes inside, in order to get the 4 keys that lead to the final world or face an early false ending. Also, the characters have to collect a rod to turn their characters from their dragon to human forms during the course of the game.[5]

Cameos

The game features cameos by other notable Taito characters or settings from games as diverse as The NewZealand Story, Darius, Space Invaders, Arkanoid, Liquid Kids, KiKi KaiKai (including Cindy, known in Japanese version as Sayo-chan and the English Pocky & Rocky games as Pocky), Yūyu no Quiz de Go! Go!, Pu·Li·Ru·La, and The Fairyland Story.

Continuity

  • Within the context of the game world, Bubble Memories - The Story of Bubble Bobble III takes place before Bubble Symphony, even though the latter is released earlier.[5]
  • All the enemies from the original Bubble Bobble appear in this game, along with a lot of newer enemies.
  • The credits (in the arcade version) show all the enemies' names, and those of characters who make cameos from other Taito games.

Ports

Bubble Symphony was released on the Sega Saturn in Japan, as well as via Taito Legends 2 on the PC in North America and Europe, and on the Xbox in Europe only. It was released on the PlayStation 2 in Japan only, via Taito Memories II Volume 2. The Xbox and PS2 versions run in upscanned 640x448 resolution, which results in slight flickering, no scanlines, and slightly blurrier image compared to the Arcade and Sega Saturn versions. A PlayStation version was completed, and was going to be published by Virgin Interactive, but was never released.[6]

Soundtrack

Bubble Symphony
Soundtrack album by
Pony Canyon, Scitron Label
ReleasedJanuary 20, 1995
GenreVideo game soundtrack
Length37:33
Bubble Symphony Original Sound Track
Soundtrack album by
Zuntata Records / Taito Corp (distributed by iTunes Store)
ReleasedJuly 31, 2013
GenreVideo game soundtrack
Length27:27

Bubble Symphony (バブルシンフォニー, Baburu Shinfonī) is a video game soundtrack that was released on CD and published by Pony Canyon and Scitron Label on January 20, 1995 in Japan. Tracks 1, 2 and 22 were arranged by Yasuko Yamada, Yasutaka Mizushima and Tamayo Kawamoto.

Bubble Symphony Original Sound Track (バブルシンフォニー オリジナルサウンドトラック, Baburu shinfonī orijinaru saundotorakku) was released by Zuntata Records and Taito Corp on July 31, 2013 in Japan.

Reception

In Japan, Game Machine listed Bubble Symphony on their December 1, 1994 issue as being the fourth most-successful table arcade game of the year.[7]

gollark: Presumably, the cool™ ones.
gollark: We already have server with an aura of exclusive mystery, but that might not be the same.
gollark: No idea. I could add baidicoot and such, but they're inconsistently on.
gollark: It is not whatsoever or in any way pizza.
gollark: Consume bees.

References

  1. "Bubble Symphony The [Coin-Op] Arcade Video Game by Taito Corp. [Japan]". arcade-history.com. Retrieved 2009-10-04.
  2. "Bubble Symphony". The International Arcade Museum. Archived from the original on 2014-03-27. Retrieved 2009-10-04.
  3. Taito Corporation. Bubble Symphony. Scene: Opening. Little Bubby, Little Bobby, Kululun, and Cororon: Bubby and Bobby's four children all together happily reading a book.
  4. Taito Corporation. Bubble Symphony. Scene: Opening. The four children were transformed by a magic spell into dragons and banished to live in a strange new world.
  5. Campbell, Stuart (July 2006), "The Definitive - Bubble Bobble", Retro Gamer, Imagine Publishing (28): 58–68
  6. "Computer and Video Games #195". Computer and Video Games. No. 195. EMAP. February 1998. p. 71.
  7. "Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - テーブル型TVゲーム機 (Table Videos)". Game Machine (in Japanese). No. 485. Amusement Press, Inc. 1 December 1994. p. 25.
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