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Hebereke's Popoon[lower-alpha 2] is a two player puzzle video game developed and published by Sunsoft. It is based on the Hebereke series. Hebereke means drunk or untrustworthy. Popoon is an onomatopoeia for the sound made by the game pieces when they explode.

Hebereke's Popoon
European SNES box art
Developer(s)Sunsoft
Publisher(s)Sunsoft
Designer(s)Uchimich Ryoji
Platform(s)Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Arcade, Windows
ReleaseSuper Nintendo Entertainment System
Arcade
  • JP: June 1994
Genre(s)Puzzle game
Mode(s)One player, Two player

The game is a Puyo Puyo clone. Players align Popoons with others to make them explode.


Availability


According to the Video Arcade Preservation Society, via their website Killer List of Video Games, the arcade machine itself is very rare, if it still exists in cabinet form at all.[1]


Gameplay


A screenshot of the first stage, showing Hebe fighting against Oh-Chan.
A screenshot of the first stage, showing Hebe fighting against Oh-Chan.

Hebereke's Popoon is a block-grouping game. There are four playable characters, each having different abilities. In story mode, the player is forced to play as Hebe and must battle certain characters.[2] A defeated player may elect to resume play by using a continue.[3] In versus mode, every playable character are immediately available to either player. Players can also select a handicap level (from 1 - 5) to increase or decrease the difficulty of the game.[4]

In each round, pairs of Popoons of various colors (the set of colors varying with the character(s) chosen by the player(s)) descend from the top of the screen.[5] These can be rotated and placed by the player. The immediate aim is to create groups of three blocks of the same color arranged either horizontally, vertically, or diagonally.[5] When such a group is created, the member blobs blow up, disappearing from the screen.[5] Any blobs above the disappearing group then drop to fill any resulting empty space.

Each time a player successfully creates a group, a Poro-poro will drop on the other player's screen in a random position.[6] These poro-porous can be removed by the other player by placing a blob of the same color as the head such that it touches the head either horizontally or vertically.[7] Both the head and the blob will disappear from the screen, in much the same manner as group of blobs, though no head will appear on the first player's screen as a result.

A player can sometimes cause multiple groups to disappear. This can happen simultaneously if the placement of a pair of blobs immediately causes two groups of blobs (or heads) to form or it can happen in a chain reaction, as the formation and disappearance of one group causes the dropping of any pieces above it, which can result in the formation of another group, and so on. If the groups in either process are of different colors then this is said to be a combination or "combo". The colors in a combo (or even a group) appear as small tiles in the lower of two panes in the middle of the screen and above the score-box.

While a combo of one color (simply an ordinary group) causes a single head to appear on the opponent's screen, a combo of two colors causes a full row of poro-porous to appear on the opponent's screen. Combos of three and four colors are much more dramatic, the precise effect depending on the player's character. Upcoming heads or special effects are kept track of by symbols placed by the players' characters in the upper of two panels in the middle of the screen.

A notable feature in Hebereke's Popoon is the constant bevy of sound effects as each player's character celebrates each group or combo by making nonsense sounds or yelling Japanese phrases.


Characters' combo abilities


When the player makes a combo of three or four colors different effects occur depending on the player's character:

Hebereke

Oh-Chan

Sukezaemon

Jennifer

Bobodori

Utsujin

Pen-Chan

Unyohn


Reception


Total! (Germany) gave it a score of 2.75 out of 6, criticizing its lack of depth, but praised it for being a nice alternative to Tetris, with usual gaudy Japanese graphics.[20] Computer and Video Games gave it a score of 91 out of 100. Play Time gave it a score of 71 out of 100.[21] In 1995, Total! ranked the game 55th on their Top 100 SNES Games stating: "A bit like Kirby’s Avalanche. If you like these puzzlers then it’s an absolute must."[22]


See also



Notes


  1. Some sources state that game came out in either November 1994 or January 1995.
  2. Japanese: へべれけのぽぷーん, Hepburn: Hebereke no Popūn

References


  1. "Hebereke no Popoon - Videogame by Sunsoft/Atlus". Killer List of Videogames. Retrieved May 28, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. Hebereke's Popoon Instruction Booklet. Europe: Sunsoft. 1994. p. 9. You will only operate the main character Hebe, I mean me, in this play mode.
  3. Hebereke's Popoon Instruction Booklet. Europe: Sunsoft. 1994. p. 9. To continue from the previous march, press the Start button before the count reaches 0.
  4. Hebereke's Popoon Instruction Booklet. Europe: Sunsoft. 1994. p. 6. There are five handicap levels, and you can play against the same character if you want.
  5. Hebereke's Popoon Instruction Booklet. Europe: Sunsoft. 1994. p. 7. Basic Popoon blocks fall in sets of two Popoons from the top of the screen. Combine three or more Popoons of the same color vertically, horizontally or diagonally by piling them up or putting them side by side. When three or more Popoons of the same color are combined, they will be eliminated.
  6. Hebereke's Popoon Instruction Booklet. Europe: Sunsoft. 1994. p. 7. This is a block with the character's face on it. When eliminating Popoons, you can scatter them into the opponent's field.
  7. Hebereke's Popoon Instruction Booklet. Europe: Sunsoft. 1994. p. 7. Match a Popoon vertically or horizontally to a PoroPoro of the same color to eliminate both.
  8. Rad Automatic; Patterson, Mark (December 1994). "Hebereke's Popcorn". Computer and Video Games. No. 157. pp. 108–109. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  9. "へべれけのぽぷーん [スーパーファミコン] / ファミ通.com". www.famitsu.com. Retrieved 2019-04-30.
  10. Gaksch, Martin (2018-01-08). "Hebereke's Popoon - im Klassik-Test (SNES)". MANIAC.de (in German). Archived from the original on April 30, 2019. Retrieved 2019-04-30.
  11. Mega Fun (in German). Germany. January 1995.
  12. Andy; Paul (November 1994). "Hebereke's Popoon". Nintendo Magazine System. No. 27. pp. 38–39. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  13. Iturrioz, Javier. "Hebereke's Popoon". Superjuegos. No. 33. pp. 88–89. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  14. Leach, James (January 1995). "Hebereke's Popoon". Super Play. No. 27. p. 50. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  15. Cox, Simon (January 1996). "Hebereke's Popoon". Super Play. No. 39. p. 47. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  16. Andy; Rob (December 1995). "Hebereke's Popoon". Total!. No. 48. p. 40. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  17. "Heberekes Popoon". Video Games (in German). December 1994. p. 130. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  18. Dave; Nick; Nick II; Adrian (February 1995). "Hebereke's Popcorn". Games World. No. 8. p. 17. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  19. Andy; Keith; Ryan (February 1995). "Hebereke's Popoon". Super Gamer. No. 11. pp. 60–61. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  20. Total! (in German). Germany. December 1994.
  21. Play Time (in German). Germany. January 1995.
  22. "Top 100 SNES Games". Total! (43): 46. July 1995. Retrieved February 28, 2022.





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