ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth
From Sega Retro
ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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System(s): Xbox | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Publisher: Sega | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Developer: Visual Concepts, ToeJam & Earl Productions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distributor: Microsoft (Europe) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Genre: Action | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of players: 1-2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth is the sequel to ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron. It was originally released for the Xbox in 2002, and is currently the first and only entry in the series to be presented in 3D. The duo are also joined by a new female friend, Latisha.
During development the game was known as ToeJam & Earl III: All Funked Up[6].
Contents
Gameplay
ToeJam & Earl III plays as a cross between the original ToeJam & Earl and ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron, with an emphasis on the former's roguelike elements, being built around the concept of exploration. Up to two players can traverse a world uncovering new environments with the aid of specified or random items in the form of "presents", which in turn can either help or hinder your experience. Collecting money also helps in making progress, special ordering presents, making deals with Earthlings and more. Keys also serve as a way to unlock new levels and environments.
The main objective is to spread the word of funk to the people of Earth, as decreed by the Funkopotimus himself, Lamont. To do this, all characters have the ability to perform Funk-Fu, which also acts as a means of self defense. Funk-Fu serves as basic attacks that look like physical attacks, but instead will funkify earthlings causing them to become friendly with you. Funkified earthlings can also give helpful items or aid in level quests.
Each action in the game rewards points, which then gives the ability to level up your character which also increases your belt-color ranking. Attempting to funkify an earthling with a rank higher than yours causes them to be invulnerable until your belt level matches theirs.
After the game has been completed, the "Random Mode" will be unlocked. Environments will be randomly generated as opposed to fixed that re-arranges the location of presents, keys, earthlings and more.
Playable Characters
Just like previous entries, up to two players are able to play simultaneously. However with the addition of Latisha as well as three secret characters, both players have the option to hotswap between the characters at the beginning or by finding a location in the overworld(s) that allow you to change characters. Each character also has specific abilities or perks that give them an upper hand over the other characters in certain situations.
The additional three characters must be downloaded to the Xbox hard drive.
History
Development
ToeJam & Earl III was once set to be a Sega Dreamcast game, and was even pencilled in for release in November 2001[7], but the demise of the console led to development being moved to the Xbox.
Once development moved onto the new platform, there was consideration in bringing the game to other platforms after the Xbox version was completed. Namely the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube. It was noted that the same experience could not be brought to other platforms in the same way as the Xbox version. As a result, only came out on one system.[8]
Production credits
- Developed by: ToeJam & Earl Productions
- Produced by: Visual Concepts
- Published by: Sega of Europe
- Lead Designer & Creative Director: Greg Johnson
- Project Manager: Mark Voorsanger
- Lead Programmer: Steve Scholl
- Production & Design Assistant: Suruchi Krieglstein
- Executive Producer: Scott Patterson, Visual Concepts
- Camera, Graphics & Game Engine Enhancements: Steve Scholl
- Artificial Intelligence, Mini-Games & Boss Battles: Matt Russell
- User Interface & Sound: Randy Tudor
- Character Controls, Software Tools & Utilities: Richard Fife
- Graphic Special Effects & Performance Optimizations: Robert Leyland
- Random Level Generation: Mark Voorsanger
- Lead Environment Artist: Maida Kreis
- Lead Animator & Concept Artist: I-Wei Huang
- Animator: Rob Skiena
- Environment Artist: Hal Smyer
- Texture Artist: Maria Bowen
- Additional Artwork: Lee Ballard, Robin Lujan
- Music Composition, Sound FX & Sound Engineering: Burke Trieschmann
- Gospel Singing: Genevieve Goings
- Gospel Composition: Greg Johnson, Genevieve Goings
- Player-Character Voices: Greg "Big Earl" Brown, Sherrie "Latisha" Jackson, Kirk "ToeJam" McHenry
- Other Character Voices: Genevieve Goings, Greg Johnson, Rob Skiena, Suruchi Krieglstein, Burke Trieschmann
- Executive Producer: Scott Patterson
- Library and Tools Engineers: Ivar Olsen, Eivind Hagen, Boris Kazanskii, Chris Larson, Chuck Batson
- QA Manager: Chien Yu
- Lead Tester: Damon Perdue
- Quality Assurance (In Alphabetical Order): Eric Andreassen, Brian Beavers, Stephen Benz, Benjamin Bracamonte, Chris Charles, John Crysdale, Andrew Davies, Christopher Gross, Jeremy Huddleston, Erik Lampi, Robert Nelson, Haven Rocha, Semmy Sebastian, Junior Sison, Derek Williams, Tim Walter
- COO Sega Europe: Naoya Tsurumi
- Director of Product Development: Kats Sato
- Assistant Producer: Jens Geffert
- Senior Producer: Matt O'Driscoll
- Technical Producer: Elliott Martin
- Product Manager: Mark Fisher
- Commercial Manager: Mark Horneff
- Sega Europe Localisation: Eva Backmann (GER), Marta Lois Gonzalez (SP), Brigitte Nadesan (FR), Giuseppe Rizzo (ITA)
- Special thanks: Marcus Joseph
- Guest Writer: Jon Gibson
- Special Testers: Adam De La Torre, Dan De La Torre, Debra Lockridge, Eriko Johnson
- : Scott Patterson, Greg Thomas, Peter Moore, Shinobu Toyoda, Rob Lightner, Robert Leffler, Dave Halverson, Oliver Miyashita, Ken Lobb
Downloadable content
Additional characters and levels were available as additional downloadable content for the game. They could be obtained either through the Xbox Live service (which was decommissioned on May 11, 2010) or from the Xbox Exhibition Disk Volume 2.
Title and description | Links | Releases |
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GeekJam
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Earl Bot
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Suteki
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Hades Maze
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Funkadelic
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Magazine articles
- Main article: ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth/Magazine articles.
Artwork
Physical scans
Sega Retro Average | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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76 | |
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Based on 10 reviews |
Technical information
ROM dump status
System | Hash | Size | Build Date | Source | Comments | |||||||||
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2002-06-20 | DVD-R | Page | ||||||||||
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2002-08-06 | DVD-R | Page | ||||||||||
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2002-09-09 | DVD-R | Page | ||||||||||
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2002-09-19 | DVD-R | Page | ||||||||||
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2001-07-02 | Dev Kit HDD | Page |
External links
- Official website (archive)
- Official website on Sega.com (archive)
- ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth on Xbox.com: US (archive)
- Greg Johnson SEGAbits Interview
References
- ↑ http://www.sega.com/games/xbox/post_xboxgame.jhtml?PRODID=10089 (Wayback Machine: 2003-10-05 06:02)
- ↑ Press release: 2002-11-04: SEGA Delivers Great Games for All Ages and All Consoles This Holiday Season
- ↑ Xbox.com (en-US; default.htm/) (Wayback Machine: 2003-10-07 06:12)
- ↑ http://www.amazon.co.uk/Microsoft-Toe-Jam-Earl-III/dp/B000083XHO (Wayback Machine: 2006-12-11 08:27)
- ↑ https://www.amazon.de/ToeJam-Earl-III-Mission-Earth/dp/B00008IXOD/ (Wayback Machine: 2019-08-26 00:15)
- ↑ File:SegaE32002PressKit Documents.pdf, page 21
- ↑ Next Generation, "June 2001" (US; 2001-05-22), page 74
- ↑ http://segabits.com/blog/2015/03/06/swingin-report-show-77-interview-with-greg-johnson-co-creator-of-toejam-and-earl/
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 Press release: 2002-10-22: SEGA Brings the Funk With ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth Exclusively for Xbox; Out-of-this-World Hip-Hop Adventure Features Exclusive Downloadable Content Via Xbox Live
- ↑ Consoles +, "Mars 2003" (FR; 2003-0x-xx), page 104
- ↑ Electronic Gaming Monthly, "December 2002" (US; 2002-11-05), page 281
- ↑ GameNOW, "December 2002" (US; 2002-11-12), page 62
- ↑ GamePro, "December 2002" (US; 2002-1x-xx), page 172
- ↑ GMR, "February 2003" (US; 2003-01-07), page 95
- ↑ Hyper, "April 2003" (AU; 2003-03-05), page 76
- ↑ Le Magazine Officiel Xbox, "Mars 2003" (FR; 2003-xx-xx), page 64
- ↑ Official Xbox Magazine, "February 2003" (UK; 2003-xx-xx), page 66
- ↑ Play, "November 2002" (US; 2002-xx-xx), page 84
- ↑ Xbox Zone, "02/2003" (DE; 2003-0x-xx), page 68
ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth | |
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Main page | Development | Magazine articles | Reception
Prototypes: 2001-07-02
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Games in the ToeJam & Earl Series | |
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ToeJam & Earl (1991) | ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron (1993) | |
ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth (2002) | |
Sega Vintage Collection: ToeJam & Earl (2012) | |
Sega Vintage Collection: ToeJam & Earl (2013) | |
ToeJam & Earl related media | |
ToeJam and Earl Rap (1991) | Sega Tunes: ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron (1996) |
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