Difference between revisions of "Toaplan"
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== Toaplan Co. LTD. == | == Toaplan Co. LTD. == | ||
+ | [[File:Logo_Toaplan_4x.png|center]] | ||
'''Toaplan Co. LTD.''' was a prolific game developer that formed in the late 70s. They declared bankruptcy in 1994, and several former members of the company would go on to form their own companies, such as [[CAVE]], [[Raizing]], and [[Takumi]]. | '''Toaplan Co. LTD.''' was a prolific game developer that formed in the late 70s. They declared bankruptcy in 1994, and several former members of the company would go on to form their own companies, such as [[CAVE]], [[Raizing]], and [[Takumi]]. |
Revision as of 10:44, 7 June 2020
Toaplan Co. LTD.
Toaplan Co. LTD. was a prolific game developer that formed in the late 70s. They declared bankruptcy in 1994, and several former members of the company would go on to form their own companies, such as CAVE, Raizing, and Takumi.
In 2017, a Japanese company known as Tatsujin was formed, which is currently the rights holder of all Toaplan IPs. "Tatsujin" is also the Japanese name of the shooting game series known as Truxton in Western territories.
General Play Style
Toaplan games have a tendency to favor using high-speed bullets with minimal pattern density (with the exception of their later games that are considered progenitors to the bullet hell subgenre of shooting games, featuring slightly higher amounts of bullets at slightly slower speeds).
Toaplan shooters also tend to have a decent amount of variety in bullet behavior, often incorporating bullets that swirl, have light homing properties, and fly in erratic patterns, as well as bullets with bigger hitboxes and shape variety.
Player hitboxes tend to be bigger than later shooting games, often requiring macro-dodging and solid routing in order to proceed further. Many of Toaplan's titles, such as Same! Same! Same! and Tatsujin Ou, are known to be exceptionally challenging due to these factors, for better or for worse.
Shooting games developed by Toaplan
Game | Year | Publisher(s) |
---|---|---|
Tiger-Heli | 1985 | Taito (JP), Romstar (NA) |
Slap Fight | 1986 | Taito |
Hishōzame / Sky Shark / Flying Shark | 1987 | Taito (JP), Romstar (NA), Electrocoin (EU) |
Kyuukyoku Tiger / Twin Cobra | 1987 | Taito (JP/EU), Romstar (NA) |
Tatsujin / Truxton | 1988 | Taito (JP/EU), Midway (NA) |
Hellfire | 1989 | Taito (JP), USA Games (NA) |
Daisenpuu / Twin Hawk | 1989 | Taito |
Zero Wing | 1989 | Toaplan (JP), Williams (NA) |
Same! Same! Same! (Same3) / Fire Shark | 1989 | Toaplan (JP/EU), Romstar (NA) |
Out Zone | 1990 | Tecmo (JP), Romstar (NA/EU) |
Vimana | 1991 | Tecmo (JP), Romstar (NA) |
Dogyuun | 1992 | Toaplan |
Tatsujin Ou / Truxton II | 1992 | Toaplan |
V-V (V-Five) / Grind Stormer | 1993 | Toaplan |
Batsugun | 1993 | Toaplan |