Difference between revisions of "Spatter"

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Revision as of 08:35, 20 April 2023

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  • Arcade (System 1)
    Export
  • Arcade (System 1)
    JP
  • Sega Mega Drive
    NTSC-U
  • Sega Mega Drive
    NTSC-J

Spatter title.png

SanrinSanchan System1 JP Title.png

Notavailable.svg

Notavailable.svg

Spatter
System(s): Sega System 1, Sega Mega Drive
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Genre: Action

















Number of players: 1-2
Release Date RRP Code
Arcade (System 1)
JP
¥? ?
































Sega Mega Drive
JP
Sega Mega Drive
US

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Spatter, known in Japan as Sanrin San-chan (三輪サンちゃん, lit. Mr. Tricycle), is a Sega System 1 arcade maze puzzle game developed by Sega R&D 1 and manufactured by Sega, and released exclusively to Japanese arcades in December 1984.

A port of the game for the Sega Mega Drive was included in the Mega Drive Mini 2 as a bonus game.

Gameplay

The object of the game is to collect all the flowers within a maze without hitting other enemies. To achieve this, the player controls "Sanrin Sanchan", a child on a tricycle, who can navigate the maze. Many parts of the maze are separated by fences, which can be used by Sanrin in order to defeat enemies. Jumping over enemies and pushing blocks into them are also options. Occasionally there is a two-dimensional bonus stage where the player must reach the top of the screen in the shortest possible time. Though the gameplay is wildly different, the structure of Splatter is very similar to Flicky.

History

Due to his similar tear-drop shaped heads and doughy eyes, Sanchan has been said to have inspired the design of the Chao characters in Sonic Adventure. However, Yuji Naka himself has confirmed that this is not the case, and any similarities between the two are purely coincidental.

The Mega Drive port of the game was developed by M2 alongside a Mega Drive port of Super Locomotive as a hobby during their free time almost 10 years prior to the development of the Mega Drive Mini 2, for no particular reason other than the staff liking the games enough to do so. Naoki Horii had proposed for both ports to be part of the 3D Classics project, but were both deemed too niche and were thus shelved[3].

Production credits

Main article: Spatter/Production credits.

System 1 version

This article needs a list of production credits, either from the game itself, a manual, or other reliable source.
Source:
Uncredited


Mega Drive version

Tricycle SAN (Spatter) MD. Ver Staff
  • Director: Naoki Horii
  • Program Unit: Renya Iizuka (TAIYO SEISAKUSHO Inc.)
  • Special Thanks: Kazuki Kubota, Ryohey Miyaki, Masayuki Fukui, Hiroyuki Sawai
Source:
In-game credits


Magazine articles

Main article: Spatter/Magazine articles.

Digital manuals

Promotional material

Spatter System1 JP Flyer.jpg
JP flyer
Spatter System1 JP Flyer.jpg
Spatter Arcade US Flyer.jpg
Export flyer
Spatter Arcade US Flyer.jpg

Physical scans

System 1 version

System 1, JP
Notavailable.svgSpatter System1 JP InstructionCard.jpg
Instuction card(s)
System 1, EU?

Technical information

Main article: Spatter/Technical information.

ROM dump status

System Hash Size Build Date Source Comments

References


Spatter

Spatter title.png

Main page | Comparisons | Maps | Magazine articles | Region coding | Technical information


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