Actions

Difference between revisions of "Sonic Eraser"

From Sonic Retro

(Discovery of the game)
Line 15: Line 15:
 
''Sonic Eraser'' was unknown to the Sonic community until 2004, when Sega launched an online system on their Japanese website, which for a small fee per game, allowed users to download and play some original Mega Drive games. Included in the selection were a number of games only released on the Sega Game Toshokan system in Japan. In February 2004, [[PACHUKA]], the owner of the [[Sonic CulT]] website, discovered the online service and purchased several games, including ''Sonic Eraser'', and various other previously unreleased Meganet games. The ROMs provided by the online service were packaged with a licensed version of [[Gens]], and came in the form of self-contained encrypted CD images, which could only be loaded by the software provided by Sega. [[Nemesis]] wrote a tool capable of descrambling the encrypted images and converting them to normal ISOs. Once in the form of an ISO, the ROMs were simply copied out and were released on the Sonic CulT website.
 
''Sonic Eraser'' was unknown to the Sonic community until 2004, when Sega launched an online system on their Japanese website, which for a small fee per game, allowed users to download and play some original Mega Drive games. Included in the selection were a number of games only released on the Sega Game Toshokan system in Japan. In February 2004, [[PACHUKA]], the owner of the [[Sonic CulT]] website, discovered the online service and purchased several games, including ''Sonic Eraser'', and various other previously unreleased Meganet games. The ROMs provided by the online service were packaged with a licensed version of [[Gens]], and came in the form of self-contained encrypted CD images, which could only be loaded by the software provided by Sega. [[Nemesis]] wrote a tool capable of descrambling the encrypted images and converting them to normal ISOs. Once in the form of an ISO, the ROMs were simply copied out and were released on the Sonic CulT website.
  
Almost immediately after the ROM was released, D, a [[sega:Fan Translated Games|fan translator]], [http://www.romhacking.net/trans/799/ translated the game's text to English].
+
Almost immediately after the ROM was released, D, a [[sega:Category:Fan Translated Games|fan translator]], [http://www.romhacking.net/trans/799/ translated the game's text to English].
  
 
==Gameplay==
 
==Gameplay==

Revision as of 21:03, 7 March 2011

n/a

Eraser title.png
Sonic Eraser
System(s): Sega Mega Drive/Genesis
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Genre: Puzzle

Sonic Eraser (ソニックイレイザー) is a 1991 puzzle game that was downloadable for players that had Sega Game Toshokan, an online game downloading service for the Sega Mega Drive in Japan. Because the service is now long defunct, the game was unknown to much of the Sonic community for a time. The game was later released in 2004 on Sega of Japan's website, and the game received more widespread attention as it was noticed by English-speaking Sonic fans this time around.

The game was made available on Sega's B-Club download service in Japan. It nearly recieved a re-release as data was found referring to it in Sonic Gems Collection.

Discovery of the game

Sonic Eraser was unknown to the Sonic community until 2004, when Sega launched an online system on their Japanese website, which for a small fee per game, allowed users to download and play some original Mega Drive games. Included in the selection were a number of games only released on the Sega Game Toshokan system in Japan. In February 2004, PACHUKA, the owner of the Sonic CulT website, discovered the online service and purchased several games, including Sonic Eraser, and various other previously unreleased Meganet games. The ROMs provided by the online service were packaged with a licensed version of Gens, and came in the form of self-contained encrypted CD images, which could only be loaded by the software provided by Sega. Nemesis wrote a tool capable of descrambling the encrypted images and converting them to normal ISOs. Once in the form of an ISO, the ROMs were simply copied out and were released on the Sonic CulT website.

Almost immediately after the ROM was released, D, a fan translator, translated the game's text to English.

Gameplay

The game is a fairly simple puzzle game. Sets of colorful geometric shapes in sets of 4 descend from the top of the screen. The pieces must be matched up in order to clear the players area of the screen. If the pieces should pile all the way to the top of the screen where incoming pieces fall the game will end for that player. There are 2 multiplayer options, 1P and 2P is a competition to see who can amass the most points. 1P vs 2P is different, when a player gets a combination of three consecutive matches of pieces, that player's Sonic attacks the other player's Sonic. As a result, the other player will momentarily lose control of their pieces. The time limit in this mode is 10 minutes.

Gameplay modes

EraserGameplay.png
The game offers 4 unique modes of gameplay.
  • Round Mode: This is sort of a puzzle mode consisting of 10 stages. The object is to clear the whirlybob pieces from the playfield by eliminating the shapes between them. The time limit is 3 minutes for each round, and pausing the game doesn't stop the clock.
  • Normal Mode: Game mode where the player simplay matches pieces to gain a high score. The better the performance of the player, the higher the difficulty level will rise and the speed at which clusters fall increases.
  • Doubt Mode: The gameplay is the same as Normal mode except that white squares don't drop down. Instead, a single shape from almost every cluster will turn into a white square when it hits the ground.
  • Block Mode: This mode allows clusters to stand on-end rather than having parts of the cluster break off the cluster if nothing is underneath it.
    Template:SonEraser
Sonic the Hedgehog games for the following systems
Sega Mega Drive

Sega Mega-CD
Sega 32X
 1991  Sonic the Hedgehog | Sonic Eraser     1992  Sonic the Hedgehog 2     1993  Sonic the Hedgehog CD | Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine | Sonic Spinball     1994  Sonic the Hedgehog 3 | Sonic & Knuckles     1995  Chaotix | Sonic Classics     1996  Sonic 3D: Flickies' Island