Planet Laika

Planet Laika (プラネットライカ) is a role-playing video game developed by Quintet and Zeque for the PlayStation home game console. The game follows the main character, Laika, through a mission to Mars which forces the player to manipulate Laika's multiple-personality disorder in order to solve puzzles.[1] All the characters in the game have dog heads, a possible reference to the Soviet space dog Laika. The game was only released in Japan.

Planet Laika
Developer(s)Quintet, Zeque
Publisher(s)Enix
Platform(s)PlayStation
Release
  • JP: October 21, 1999
Genre(s)Role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay

A major theme of the game is Laika's different personalities, embodied by three different characters, Ernest, Yolanda, and Spacer. By talking to different characters, Laika absorbs their different colored auras and when a specific color has been absorbed enough, Laika can turn into that personality to solve a problem, such as needing Ernest, the strongest, to lift a heavy shutter.[1]

Unlike most RPGs, which feature turn-based battles, Planet Laika's are played out almost like Space Invaders and Pong.[1] The player must bounce around a Mind Core and reflect back the enemies' attacks to inflict damage. There are not a lot of battles in the game and enemies only attack when Laika is in one of the special forms.

Development

Planet Laika was co-developed by Japanese software developers Quintet (famous for ActRaiser, Illusion of Gaia, and Terranigma) and Zeque, a relatively unknown developer in North America, but known in Japan for the PlayStation cult hit Kowloon's Gate.[1] Zeque was responsible for the concept, design, scenario, and graphics, whereas Quintet handled the programming and sound. Like Kowloon's Gate, Zeque's themes for Planet Laika were good and evil and light and darkness. Some of the characters from both games share names as well.

gollark: You didn't have time? Isn't this quite a long challenge thing?
gollark: Also the fact that most stuff, even if it uses DC internally (most things probably do), runs off mains AC and has some sort of built-in/shipped-with-it power supply, and there aren't really common standards for high-powered lower-voltage DC connectors around. Except USB-C, I guess? That goes to 100W.
gollark: I guess it depends on exactly what you do, and the resistance of the wires.
gollark: Which is as far as I know more an issue of low voltages than DC itself, but DC means you can't change the voltage very easily.
gollark: There is the problem that low-voltage DC loses power more quickly over longer distances.

References

  1. Sato, Ike (November 30, 1999). "Planet Laika Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2011-08-19.
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