Yoake no Mariko

Yoake no Mariko (夜明けのマリコ) is a voice acting simulation game designed by Spümcø, a cartoon animation studio founded by The Ren & Stimpy Show creator and animator John Kricfalusi. Artwork and character design were undertaken by Spümcø for both games and music was performed by such notable musicians as Eric Gorfain.[5]

Developer(s)Lindwurm[1]
Publisher(s)SCEI
Designer(s)Spümcø[2][3]
Platform(s)PlayStation 2
Release
Genre(s)Simulation
Mode(s)Single-player, Multi-player

Versions and sequels

The game was released in December 2001 exclusively to Japan and a Performance Pack was released shortly afterward.[6] Following this, a sequel entitled Yoake no Mariko 2nd Act was released on 24 January 2002.[7]

Gameplay

To play Yoake no Mariko, players must provide voice acting to correspond with a movie scene that unfolds before them. There are six levels (or scenes) in the game which include such genres as the western drama, the horror flick, and the Kung Fu action flick.[2] As the background film clip plays, on-screen cues inform players when to deliver their lines and how to modulate their vocal intonations in a manner similar to karaoke games. The spoken lines are then graded by an in-game algorithm and the players are scored on their performance. Specifically considered are the players' timings, volumes, and tones.

gollark: YouTube uses 128kbps Opus.
gollark: Low meaning "<16kbps or so".
gollark: If you can afford really high bitrates FLAC is better because it's lossless, and at low ones it's apparently beaten by other stuff.
gollark: Opus is very cool because it is open/not patented or whatever and the best available codec for everything except really high or really low bitrates.
gollark: MP3 is apparently "transparent", i.e. sounds the same as uncompressed audio, at 256kbps or so, Opus at lower ones.

References

  1. VGR Game Profile. VGRebirth.org. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  2. Yoake no Mariko (Japan Version) for PlayStation 2. Deal Time. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  3. Levi. Watch: Yoake no Mariko, Spumco and Sony’s crazy collaboration. SiliconEra. 16 April 2008.
  4. Yoake no Mariko. GameSpot. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  5. Producer Profile – Eric Gorfain. Studio Expresso. 2001.
  6. Yoake no Mariko. GameFAQs. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  7. Yoake no Mariko 2nd Act Updates. GameSpot. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.