Tama: Adventurous Ball in Giddy Labyrinth
Tama: Adventurous Ball in Giddy Labyrinth[lower-alpha 1] is a video game developed and published by TWI renamed from Tengen for the Sega Saturn and Sony PlayStation as a launch title for both consoles in 1994.
Tama: Adventurous Ball in Giddy Labyrinth | |
---|---|
![]() Original Saturn cover art | |
Developer(s) | Time Warner Interactive |
Publisher(s) | Time Warner Interactive |
Designer(s) | Jun Amanai Mizuho Yoshioka |
Programmer(s) | Osamu Yamamoto |
Artist(s) | Kenichi Nemoto Michio Okano Satomi Yokose |
Composer(s) | Kenji Yokoyama |
Platform(s) | PlayStation Sega Saturn |
Release | Saturn PlayStation |
Genre(s) | Platform, racing |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Gameplay
Tama is a game in which the player rolls a ball from one end of a maze to the other, by shifting the terrain.[3]
Reception
Next Generation reviewed the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "Unlikely to star big in Saturn's US line-up. And this is probably a Good Thing."[3]
Next Generation reviewed the game, rating it three stars out of five, and stated that "On one hand it's encouraging to see the Saturn handling the demands of this game as nicely as it does, but in the end its power would be better applied elsewhere."[4]
Reviews
- Mean Machines - Feb, 1995
Notes
gollark: I know a bit of C but would never want to use it seriously.
gollark: I use Rust, the compiler's a bit slow.
gollark: I play Minecraft with quite a lot of mods, and also want something relatively high-speed to compile code.
gollark: I'd like portability and performance, but that's also stupidly expensive.
gollark: I only have a desktop because modern laptops are basically awful for anything but power efficiency. Unless you get a stupidly expensive one.
References
- "SEGA SATURN Soft > 1994-1995" (in Japanese). GAME Data Room. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
- "PlayStation Soft > 1994-1995" (in Japanese). GAME Data Room. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
- "Finals". Next Generation. No. 4. Imagine Media. April 1995. pp. 87–88.
- "Finals". Next Generation. No. 8. Imagine Media. August 1995. p. 70.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.