Difference between revisions of "Osomatsu-kun Hachamecha Gekijou"

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{{stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' (おそ松くん はちゃめちゃ劇場) is a 1988 action game by [[Sega]] for the [[Sega Mega Drive]] tying into the ''[[wikipedia:Osomatsu-kun|Osomatsu-kun]]'' media franchise in Japan, which at the time saw a revival in the form of an anime series stared the same year by [[Studio Pierrot]] and is both the first Japan-exclusive and the first non-ported Mega Drive game. It is one of the few Mega Drive games to never receive full support for [[TMSS]], meaning it will only work on Japanese and Asian Mega Drive consoles or international consoles which do not have TMSS.
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{{stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' (おそ松くん はちゃめちゃ劇場) is a [[Sega Mega Drive]] action game developed by [[Sega R&D 2]] and published by [[Sega]]. Based on the Japanese media franchise ''[[wikipedia:Osomatsu-kun|Osomatsu-kun]]'', it was released exclusively in Japan in December 1988, and alongside arcade ports like [[Super Thunder Blade]] and [[Altered Beast]], was the first original game developed for Sega's new 16-bit platform. Notable for its overwhelmingly poor critical reception, the game was universally panned for its short length, maze-like gameplay, frustrating controls, irritating soundtrack, and frequent crashing, and has gained a cult reputation as one of the worst games on the [[Sega Mega Drive]].
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As ''Osomatsu-kun'' predates the development of the [[TradeMark Security System]], it will only function properly on pre-VA6 revision Model 1 [[Sega Mega Drive]] hardware.  
  
 
==Story==
 
==Story==

Revision as of 02:52, 14 August 2021

n/a

Osomatsukun MDTitleScreen.png

Osomatsu-kun Hachamecha Gekijou
System(s): Sega Mega Drive
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Licensor: Fujio Pro, Kodansha, Studio Pierrot
Genre: Action[1][2]

















Number of players: 1
Release Date RRP Code
Sega Mega Drive
JP
¥5,5005,500 G-4005

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Osomatsu-kun Hachamecha Gekijou (おそ松くん はちゃめちゃ劇場) is a Sega Mega Drive action game developed by Sega R&D 2 and published by Sega. Based on the Japanese media franchise Osomatsu-kun, it was released exclusively in Japan in December 1988, and alongside arcade ports like Super Thunder Blade and Altered Beast, was the first original game developed for Sega's new 16-bit platform. Notable for its overwhelmingly poor critical reception, the game was universally panned for its short length, maze-like gameplay, frustrating controls, irritating soundtrack, and frequent crashing, and has gained a cult reputation as one of the worst games on the Sega Mega Drive.

As Osomatsu-kun predates the development of the TradeMark Security System, it will only function properly on pre-VA6 revision Model 1 Sega Mega Drive hardware.

Story

Iyami and Chibita have kidnapped Karamatsu, Choromatsu, Ichimatsu, Jyushimatsu, and Todomatsu in retaliation for being attacked by them and Osomatsu. Osomatsu sets out to rescue them, armed only with a slingshot. The plot of the game is presented in a short manga in the manual.

Gameplay

B shoots balls from a slingshot that only go a short way before disappearing. C jumps; Up+C jumps higher. Up enters doors. Down crouches.  START  bring up some sort of items menu; Up in the pause menu select the item and A use that selected item.

Stages (incomplete)

The game is divided into three main stages, which are subdivided into four areas (the main area, the sky area, the water area and the underground area).

OKHG MD Stage1A.jng Stage 1 - Momotarou Densetsu (Legend of Peachboy)
Sub Boss: Momotarou Chibita
Boss: Kabuki Iyami
Stage 2 - Snow White
Sub Boss: Witch Dekapan
Boss: Snow White Iyami
Stage 3 - Prehistory
Sub Boss: Smilodon Iyami
Boss: Dinosaur Iyami

Development

Fujio Akatsuka, who was not fond of video games, allegedly threw an ashtray at one of the developers.[3]

Reception

The game was panned by reviewers.[3]

Magazine articles

Main article: Osomatsu-kun Hachamecha Gekijou/Magazine articles.

Promotional material

Logo-pdf.svg
Print advert in Beep! MegaDrive (JP) #0: "Extra issue of Beep!" (1989-04-27)
Logo-pdf.svg

Physical scans

Sega Retro Average 
Publication Score Source
{{{{{icon}}}|L}} Division by zero.
Based on
0 review
Sega Retro Average 
Publication Version Score
Aktueller Software Markt (DE)
64
[4]
Beep! MegaDrive (JP) NTSC-J
40
[5]
Famitsu (JP) NTSC-J
58
[6]
Joystick (FR) NTSC-J
75
[7]
Mega Drive Fan (JP) NTSC-J
51
[8]
Sega Saturn Magazine (JP) NTSC-J
33
[9]
Sega Mega Drive
53
Based on
6 reviews

Osomatsu-kun Hachamecha Gekijou

Mega Drive, JP
OsomatsuKun MD JP Box.jpg
Cover
Osomatsukun MD JP CartTop.jpg
OsomatsuKun MD JP Cart.jpg
Cart
Osomatsukun MD jp manual.pdf
Manual

Technical information

ROM dump status

System Hash Size Build Date Source Comments
Sega Mega Drive
CRC32
MD5
SHA-1 ?
256kB 1988 Cartridge (JP)

References