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Pu·Li·Ru·La

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pu·Li·Ru·La
Cover of the FM Towns Marty version
Developer(s)Arcade:
Taito
Sega Saturn & PlayStation Port:
Goo!
Publisher(s)Arcade:
Taito
Sega Saturn & PlayStation Port:
Xing Entertainment
Designer(s)Mt. Mihara B. E. Umakboh
Artist(s)Zak Munn
Masami Kikuchi
Mutter Tomy
E. Bang De Boo. M
Composer(s)Kazuko Umino
Platform(s)Arcade
FM Towns Marty
Sega Saturn
PlayStation
PlayStation 2
ReleaseArcade:
  • NA: November, 1991
Saturn & PlayStation:
  • JP: August 28, 1997
PlayStation 2:
  • JP: July 28, 2005
Genre(s)Beat 'em up
Mode(s)Single player, two player co-op
Arcade systemTaito F2 System
(Expanded hardware)

Pu·Li·Ru·La (プリルラ) is a 1991 arcade game released by Taito. The game was later ported to the FM Towns Marty, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, and PlayStation 2 in Japan.[1] The PS1 and Saturn versions are known as Pu·Li·Ru·La Arcade Gears. The PS2 version is part of a compilation called Taito Memories (Volume 1), but omitted from the international release of Taito Legends. Pu·Li·Ru·La is known for its elaborate anime art style and bizarre enemy characters.[1][2]

Story

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Pu·Li·Ru·La takes place in Radishland, a land where time is kept correctly flowing with a time key. However, "a bad man appeared and stole the time key to stop the time flow. The towns were attacked one by one, the time flow was stopped and they received damage", as the English translation explains. Zac and Mel, the playable characters, are requested by an old man to defend their town.[1] The old man also gives the children a "magic stick" to fight with.[3]

Gameplay

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Pu·Li·Ru·La is a basic beat 'em up action game. Player 1 controls Zac and Player 2 controls Mel (who is based on Little Bo Peep). Both characters are identical control-wise. The flow of the game consists of fighting through enemies until the player reaches the boss at the end of the area. When enemies are hit, they turn into animals and run off the screen.[3] The player is awarded points if they walk into the animals.

Release and legacy

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Japanese version

The original Japanese version of Pu·Li·Ru·La featured an area with huge female legs sticking out of the wall with a door in the middle of them, which pink elephants would occasionally escape. This section was removed in the international release. A stage from Bubble Symphony is based on Pu·Li·Ru·La. The enemies and boss characters are from this game.[1]

A limited-edition soundtrack was released for Pu·Li·Ru·La by Pony Canyon/Scitron on July 17, 1992. Zac has also appeared as an assist character in Arkanoid vs. Space Invaders for iOS and Android in 2016.

Other media

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Reception

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French magazine Game Fan praised the game.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Pulirula at Hardcore Gaming 101 Retrieved April 15, 2008
  2. ^ F1 System Hardware (Taito) Retrieved April 15, 2008
  3. ^ a b Sexual Moments in video game history Retrieved April 15, 2008
  4. ^ "Pulirula - Saturn & Psone Review". Game Fan. 2008-09-14. Archived from the original on 2008-09-14. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
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