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Otocky (オトッキー) is a video game released in 1987 for the Family Computer Disk System in Japan.[1] Developed by SEDIC and published by ASCII Corporation, the game was conceived and designed by Toshio Iwai. Natsuki Ozawa endorsed the game.

Otocky
Cover art featuring Natsuki Ozawa
Developer(s)Scitron & Art
SEDIC
Publisher(s)ASCII Corporation
Designer(s)Toshio Iwai
Platform(s)Family Computer Disk System
Release
  • JP: March 27, 1987
Genre(s)Music game
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay


Otocky can be described as a musical side-scrolling shoot 'em up. The player's spaceship has a ball for a weapon, which can be fired in eight directions; each direction corresponds to a different musical note. The note plays when the player presses the fire button, and is also quantized in time so that it matches the beat playing in the background. By using the weapon selectively the player can improvise music while playing.

The ball is used to destroy enemies by touching them, and also to catch various types of objects:

The ball gets smaller when the player is touched by an enemy, until the player loses a life.

Completing a certain number of levels unlocks a music editor which makes it possible for the player to freely compose their own melodies.


Legacy


Otocky is notable for being one of the first games that include creative/procedural generative music, as well as developing the concept of the "musical shoot 'em up".

Otocky is a precursor of Rez, Tetsuya Mizuguchi's 2002 Dreamcast and PlayStation 2 game exploring similar themes of player action and musical evolution.[2] Jake Kazdal, the only North-American member of United Game Artists, has confirmed that while the team did become acquainted with the Disk System game during the process of creating Rez, it has not been much of an influence in fact.[3]


See also



References


  1. siliconera.com: Otocky by Katie Montminy Retrieved July 30, 2006 Archived March 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  2. handcircus.com: Ode to "Otocky" (by Toshio Iwai) (July 26, 2006) Archived September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 30, 2006
  3. Jake Kazdal: An American Gaijin - A CoreGamers Interview (September 16, 2008) Archived January 23, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 06, 2009





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