Trip'd

Trip'd[lower-alpha 1] is a video game developed by Japanese studio Warp and published by Panasonic for the 3DO.[3][4]

Trip'd
North American 3DO cover art
Developer(s)Warp
Publisher(s)3DO
PlayStation
Platform(s)3DO
PlayStation
Release3DO
PlayStation
Genre(s)Puzzle
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer (up to two players)

Gameplay

3DO version screenshot.

Trip'd is an action / puzzle game.

Development and release

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
GamePro(3DO) 10/20[5]
Next Generation(3DO) [6]
3DO Magazine(3DO) [7]
Digital Press(3DO) 6 / 10[8]
Game Zero Magazine(3DO) 16/50[9]
MAN!AC(3DO) 66%[10]
VideoGames(3DO) 8/10[11]

Next Generation reviewed the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "[its] variables [...] really only serve to complicate a wonderfully simple game, and make it more frustrating than innovative."[6]

Notes

  1. Also known as Space Creature Fropon (Japanese: 宇宙生物フロポン君, Hepburn: Uchū Seibutsu Furopon-kun) in Japan.
gollark: Inheritance is bad anyway.
gollark: Some function which renders text on a given point on the screen...?
gollark: If you do actually want read/writable data it's probably best to use a serialization format other than Lua code, though textutils.serialise does actually almost output valid Lua.
gollark: <@228280688359636992> You can definitely do that. I prefer the JSON approach since it can be automatically generated *from* your data.
gollark: I think `encode` to convert data to JSON and `decode` to convert JSON to data.

References

  1. "3DO Soft > 1994" (in Japanese). GAME Data Room. Retrieved 2019-03-21.
  2. "PlayStation Soft > 1994-1995" (in Japanese). GAME Data Room. Retrieved 2019-03-21.
  3. The Stalker (August 1995). "3DO Preview - Trip'd". GameFan. Vol. 3 no. 8. DieHard Gamers Club. p. 52.
  4. Wynne, Stuart (May 1996). "Tips - Trip'd". 3DO Magazine. No. 10. Paragon Publishing. p. 22.
  5. Girl, Cover (August 1995). "ProReview - 3DO: Trip'd". GamePro. No. 73. IDG. p. 75.
  6. "Finals - 3DO - Trip'd". Next Generation. No. 8. Imagine Media. August 1995. p. 70.
  7. Wynne, Stuart (October–November 1995). "Review: Trip'd – After creating 3DO's most chilling adventure with D, Tokyo's Warp studios have now produced the system's first Tetris clone. Unsurprisingly, it's one of the most imaginative and playable variants ever, despite some unpleasant graphics". 3DO Magazine. No. 6. Paragon Publishing. p. 36.
  8. Santulli, Joe (March 1998). "Random Reviews Lite - Trip'd (Panasonic, for 3DO)". Digital Press - The Bio-Degradable Source For Videogamers. No. 36. Joe Santulli. pp. 14–15.
  9. R.I.P.; Salamander (February 1996). "The Final Word game review – Trip'D -- Warp". Game Zero Magazine. Game Zero. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  10. Gaksch, Martin (February 1996). "Spiele-Tests 3DO: Trip'd". MAN!AC (in German). No. 28. Cybermedia. p. 71.
  11. Soria, Gabe (September 1995). "Power Reviews - 3DO: Trip'd — Trip'd will invade your dreams". VideoGames - The Ultimate Gaming Magazine. No. 80. Larry Flynt Publications. p. 85.
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