Mr. Driller

Mr. Driller

North American PlayStation cover art
Developer(s) Namco
Publisher(s) Namco
Platform(s) Arcade, Various
Release date(s)

Arcade

PlayStation

  • JP June 29, 2000
  • NA May 10, 2000
  • EU May 15, 2000

Dreamcast

  • NA June 25, 2000
  • JP June 29, 2000
  • EU July 26, 2000

Game Boy Color

  • JP June 29, 2000
  • NA August 2, 2000
  • EU January 1, 2000

Windows

  • JP February 1, 2001
  • EU May 4, 2001

Mobile

  • NA September 20, 2004

PlayStation Network

  • JP December 21, 2006
  • NA February 18, 2014[2]

iOS

  • NA September 28, 2009
Arcade system Mr. Driller: Namco System 12; Mr. Driller 2, Mr. Driller G: Namco System 10
Display Raster
Vertical orientation

Mr. Driller (ミスタードリラー Misuta Dorira) is a series of video games developed by Namco. Mr. Driller puts the player in the role of a driller moving down through screens of blocks, having to keep his air supply from running out while avoiding being squashed by falling blocks. Games in this series have been released for PlayStation, Dreamcast, WonderSwan, Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance, Nintendo GameCube, DS, WiiWare, Xbox Live, Windows, and iOS in addition to the arcade versions. The main character of these games is Susumu Hori, the son of Taizou Hori, who was the star of the original Dig Dug game.

The project that would become Mr. Driller was originally intended to be a third game in the Dig Dug series, under the working title of Dig Dug 3. Hexagonal blocks were briefly considered, but this idea was abandoned when chain construction proved to be too complicated. Dig Dug 3 was initially developed unofficially by a few Namco staff; however, work on the game was suspended while R4: Ridge Racer Type 4 was being completed. However, Namco executives were impressed with the game and decided to support it as an official project.

Gameplay

In Mr. Driller, after a character is selected and a country is selected, the player then drills a seemingly endless onslaught of colored blocks, ending with that country's given mileage (given in meters). The levels are randomly generated, and the blocks can merge with other similarly colored blocks, therefore disppearing after 4 or more blocks merge. There are 4 main colors of blocks: red, blue, green, and yellow. There are also 3 special kinds of blocks: white blocks, which are pale blocks that don't merge with other similarly colored ones; crystal blocks, blocks that last for around a few seconds before disappearing; and X-blocks, brown crate-like boxes that take 5 drill hits to disintegrate, and also take off 20% of the player's air supply. The player has an air supply that acts as his vitality gauge, and when it is under 30%, the player's complexion will turn blue and a bubble with an air capsule will appear over his head. To keep the air from running out, the player can collect air capsules that replenish the driller's health by 20%. A life is lost when the player's air runs out, or if he/she is squished by falling blocks. The gameplay has been described as "Dig Dug meets Tetris."

Characters

The Mr. Driller series

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, May 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.