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(pronounced as "Loo-min-ess") is a 2004 puzzle game developed by Q Entertainment and published for the
PlayStation Portable The PlayStation Portable (PSP) is a handheld game console developed and marketed by Sony Computer Entertainment. It was first released in Japan on December 12, 2004, in North America on March 24, 2005, and in PAL regions on September 1, 2005, ...
by Bandai in Japan and by Ubisoft elsewhere. The objective of the game is to arrange descending two-colored 2×2 blocks to create 2×2 squares of matching color. A vertical line known as the "time line" sweeps across the field, erases completed squares, and awards points. Each stage has a skin that affects the background, block colors, music, and the speed of the time line. ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' is the work of video game designer Tetsuya Mizuguchi, who had worked at
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. Katsumi Yokota contributed to the graphic designer and assisted Takayuki Nakamura with music composition. Mizuguchi originally wanted to make a music-heavy '' Tetris''-style game, but licensing issues prevented this so he created a new concept for ''Lumines''. Mizuguchi was inspired to make a music game on the PSP, one of the few handhelds on the market with a headphone jack. The game was released as a launch title for the PSP in Japan in December 2004, in North America in March 2005, and in Europe in September 2005. It was later ported for mobile phones,
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, and the
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(PS2); a high-definition remaster was made for the
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(PS4), the
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, the Xbox One, Windows, and Amazon Luna. ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' sold over half a million copies in North America, Europe, and Japan, and was awarded "Best Handheld Game of 2005" by multiple media outlets. Several publications recognized it as one of the top games of 2005 and one of the best-ever launch titles. It was praised for its music and gameplay; multiple reviewers described it as addictive and drew comparisons with ''Tetris''. The ports received less praise than the original version; critics commended the mobile phone version for its new features but criticized its poor sound quality, while the PS2 port was criticized for omitting some songs present in the original. Reviewers complimented the remastered version for enhancing the quality of sounds and visuals but were disappointed that an online multiplayer mode was not included as a new feature. The game spawned numerous spin-offs and sequels for multiple platforms, becoming the first entry in the '' Lumines'' series.


Gameplay

''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' is a falling block puzzle game. The objective is to arrange grouped blocks descending from the top of a 16×10 grid playing field to create single-color squares once they have landed. Grouped blocks have a 2×2 shape and vary between two colors. Players can rotate the descending grouped blocks, move them left or right, or drop them straight down. When part of the grouped blocks hits an obstruction, the remaining blocks separate from the rest and continue to fall. A single-color square is created when grouped blocks form a 2×2 shape of matching color. Additional blocks of matching color can be used to create larger shapes. The game ends when the blocks pile up to the top of the playing field. A vertical line known as the "time line" sweeps through the playing field from left to right, erasing any completed single-color groups of blocks it touches and awarding points for each group. If a square is created in the middle of the moving time line, only half of the square is taken and no points are awarded. Players earn increasing score multipliers by repeatedly clearing squares on consecutive time line sweeps. Additional score bonuses are earned by clearing the playing field or reducing the remaining blocks to a single color. The maximum score is 999,999 points. Blocks with embedded gems are known as "special blocks"; if these are used to create squares, they allow the time line to eliminate adjacent blocks of the same color. Each stage has a skin that affects the background's appearance, the blocks' color scheme, the music track, sound effects, and the speed of the time line. Stages with fast tempos make it more difficult to create large combos and stages with slow tempos may cause the playing field to fill more quickly while players wait for the time line to sweep across the screen. There are five modes: Challenge, Single Skin, Time Attack, Puzzle, and Versus. Challenge mode is the main mode and cycles through skins in a fixed order of increasing difficulty. Single Skin mode allows players to select one skin to play for the entire session. In Time Attack mode, players have a limited time to clear as many blocks as possible. Puzzle mode challenges players to arrange blocks to create pictures. In Versus mode, players battle against A.I. opponents or against other players via their wireless connections. The Versus mode begins with the playing field divided in half; the goal is to clear successive squares, which shrinks the opposing player's space. Later ports and remasters added modes such as Arcade, Mission, Shuffle, and Skin Edit mode. Arcade mode is designed for mobile phone ports; players complete a total of 20 stages with CPU versus battles serving as Boss stages after a certain amount of stages are complete. Arcade mode also adds blocks that can explode, a third color block within certain stages, and new grouped block shapes such as S-shaped or three-block-wide rectangles. Mission mode offers a range of challenges such as clearing the stage in a certain number of moves or clearing a specified number of columns. Shuffle mode creates game sessions with a randomized order of stages. Skin Edit mode allows players to customize their game session by selecting the order of unlocked skins.


Development and release

''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' was the first game developed by Q Entertainment with Tetsuya Mizuguchi as the designer. Mizuguchi was part of the studio's founding following his departure from
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after they dissolved United Game Artists, Mizuguchi's previous venture. It was developed by six people in a year. The game was 75% complete when it was announced at the Tokyo Game Show 2004. When he first learned about the
PlayStation Portable The PlayStation Portable (PSP) is a handheld game console developed and marketed by Sony Computer Entertainment. It was first released in Japan on December 12, 2004, in North America on March 24, 2005, and in PAL regions on September 1, 2005, ...
(PSP), Mizuguchi was inspired to make a puzzle game with music for the device, which he described as an "interactive Walkman". He considered it ideal for his game because it was one of the few handheld consoles to have a headphone jack and high-quality sound. To attract casual players, Mizuguchi wanted his new game to be less daunting to play than his earlier titles '' Rez'' and '' Space Channel 5''. Originally, he wanted to make a music-heavy ''Tetris''-style game but problems with licensing led him to create a new concept. Mizuguchi did not consider developing games for the PSP difficult and began working on the game before any PSP software tools were provided. The game's title was derived from "Lumine", meaning to illuminate. The subtitle "Puzzle Fusion" is intended to reflect the mixture of music and gameplay. The prototype was initially developed on a personal computer (PC) running
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with the specifications of the PSP in mind. During the prototype's development, Katsumi Yokota was mainly a graphic designer and illustrator, and considered himself an amateur music composer. He purchased several PC software packages, including FruityLoops and Cubase to assemble loops of electronic music, and
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to create the visual graphics. Yokota learned about using sound effects while working on ''Rez'', which led him to focus on making sound effects to supplement music for the prototype. He experimented with rhythms that synchronized with the game's time line bar. When deciding ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' mood, Mizuguchi felt something was missing from the soundtrack and looked for extant external music. While on a mid-year camping trip in Okinawa, he discovered the song "Shinin" by Shinichi Osawa. The discovery motivated him to ask Yokota to implement a mode that would match music with visuals. Mizuguchi also asked Osawa to include four tracks that would be sequenced with the theme of a party beginning at sunset and ending at sunrise. Osawa contributed the songs "Shinin", "Shake Ya Body", "I Hear the Music in my Soul", and "Lights". Yokota initially thought the game's soundtrack would be limited to techno and dance music, and worried the project lacked musical variety. Takayuki Nakamura joined the project as the lead composer after the prototype was completed with Yokota assisting. He overcame this problem by constructing a rich variety of songs that were based on an understanding of the game's design, and considered the final product to be reminiscent of
ambient music Ambient music is a genre of music that emphasizes tone and atmosphere over traditional musical structure or rhythm. It may lack net composition, beat, or structured melody.The Ambient Century by Mark Prendergast, Bloomsbury, London, 2003. It u ...
. Nakamura primarily used Reason and Ableton Live software to compose the songs. His goal for the background music was for it to feel complete and enjoyable to listen to despite it changing during gameplay. The music and skins were simultaneously developed; the music had to be completed before the skins were finalized. Exceptions were made for the tracks "The SPY loves me" and "Japanese Form", which were directly influenced by Yokota's design. Nakamura implemented strict rules for the songs to follow time signature because the playing field is divided into 16 columns and the time line needed to be synchronized with the beat. He made an exception for the song "Big Elpaso", which alternates between time signatures and , resulting in an average of a time signature for every two bars. On December 12, 2004, ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' was published by Bandai and released in Japan as a launch title for the PSP. For North America and Europe, the game was published by Ubisoft and was released on March 23 and September 1, 2005 respectively.


Ports

''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' was ported to multiple platforms, each with their own revisions. In September 2005, mobile game publisher Gameloft announced it would release ''Lumines'' for mobile phones. ''Lumines Mobile'' was released in North America on March 12, 2006, and in Europe on May 30 of that same year. Mobile phone ports exclude Versus mode between players while introducing Arcade mode and Shuffle mode. By the time ports for additional platforms were released, several sequels and spin-offs had been made available and incorporated new music and gameplay features from those games. Buena Vista Games released a port for the
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(PS2) that was published as ''Lumines Plus'' in North America and Europe on February 27 and March 9, 2007 respectively. ''Lumines Plus'' includes nine songs from ''
Lumines II is a 2006 puzzle video game developed by Q Entertainment for the PlayStation Portable (PSP). It was released in November 2006 in Europe and North America by Buena Vista Games, and in February 2007 in Japan by Bandai Namco Games. The objective o ...
'' (2006) but omits "Shake Ya Body", "I Hear the Music in my Soul", and "Lights" from the original game. A version for
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was released on November 28, 2007, via WildTangent, and on April 18, 2008, via
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's network. The WildTangent and Steam versions include Mission mode and Skin Edit mode, which had been introduced in ''
Lumines Live! is a 2006 puzzle video game developed by Q Entertainment for the Xbox 360. It was released in Europe in October 2006, in North America in January 2007, and in Japan in March 2007. The objective of the game is to move and rotate 2×2 blocks to for ...
'' (2006). The Steam version contains 21 unlockable skins with a sampling of stages for Time Attack, Puzzle, and Mission modes. An "Advance" pack that adds a second group of 21 skins, 70 puzzles, and 35 missions to the base game, was released the same day.


''Lumines Remastered''

In March 2018, Mizuguchi, under his new company Enhance Games, announced with the Japanese studio Resonair as the developer. It was released later that year on June 26, 2018, for
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, the
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, the
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(PS4), and the Xbox One. Physical versions for PS4 and Nintendo Switch platforms were distributed for a limited time between April 26 to May 10, 2019, via Limited Run Games. The game was made available for
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on the Amazon Luna streaming platform on October 20, 2020. ''Lumines Remastered'' has enhanced visuals and support for high-resolution systems. It includes the original, Nakamura-composed, high- bitrate music that had been downsampled for the PSP version and other releases. Some blocks and visual effects were redesigned. Game director Eiichiro Ishige considers it a remake rather than a remaster. The game retains the original Challenge, Puzzle, Time Attack, and Versus modes alongside the Mission, Shuffle, and Skin Edit mode introduced in later releases. However, it omits the Single Skin mode from the original PSP version. Mizuguchi did not want to re-release ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' unless new features could be implemented. He decided to remaster it after learning about HD Rumble on the Nintendo Switch's Joy-Con game controller, and said haptic gameplay features would add something new to ''Lumines''. The game introduces Trance Vibration, a feature that enables additional controllers in a single-player game. The feature is capable of using up to eight Joy-Con for the Switch, eight Xbox Wireless Controllers for the Xbox One, four DualShock controllers for the PS4, and additional Bluetooth controllers for Microsoft Windows. According to Mizuguchi, the additional controllers provide players with a sense of
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: players can place the controllers on their bodies to experience vibration feedback during gameplay. The vibrations of the additional controllers are synchronized to the rhythm of the game's music.


Soundtracks

Three soundtrack albums based on music from ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' were produced. Takayuki Nakamura released the first soundtrack, titled ''Lumines Remixes'' on June 9, 2005, on his label Brainstorm. The first disc of the two-disc set has 21 tracks and the second has 19 tracks. The second soundtrack, which was distributed on January 23, 2008, is titled ''L.II remixes'' and includes tracks from ''Lumines II'' and remixes of tracks from the original game. The third album, which is titled was released digitally on June 26, 2018, as part of a limited-release bundle for PS4 and Steam versions of ''Lumines Remastered''. Limited Run Games made a double LP version available for a limited time on June 26, 2019, as part of a bundle with physical editions of the game for PS4 and Switch.


Reception


Original release

''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic. Multiple reviewers praised its combination of music and visuals. ''
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'' complimented the combination of music and colors, calling it "a mini rave in your hands". '' GameSpot'' praised the way the game's sound and visuals correspond to the actions performed. ''PALGN'' commended the game's graphic design, saying the menu design and avatars make it distinct. Although ''PALGN'' reviewer did not enjoy the game's music genre, the website still gave a positive review to its soundtrack. '' Eurogamer'' deemed the audio superior to the visuals, praising the way the player's actions build the musical elements to a crescendo, and described it as "the real star of the show". '' IGN'' gave an unenthusiastic response to the sound and visuals, saying they do not have enough interactivity to allow players to feel an impact. Reviewers gave the gameplay a positive reception. ''
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'' complimented the single-player mode, comparing the quality of the game to
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. ''IGN'' praised the gameplay, noting they were attracted to the game design and addicted to unlocking background skins. ''1Up.com'', ''GameSpot'', and ''PALGN'' also used the word "addictive" to describe the gameplay. ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' was frequently compared with other tile-matching video games by critics, particularly ''Tetris''. ''GamePro'' considered the game as addictive as ''Tetris'' and '' Bejeweled''. According to ''
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''; "Q Entertainment has used the ''Tetris'' template to duplicate a lightning-in-a-bottle feeling equal in brilliance and addictiveness to the puzzle classic". ''GameSpot'' praised ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' as "the greatest ''Tetris''-style puzzle game since ''Tetris'' itself".


Later releases

The mobile phone port ''Lumines Mobile'' was also well received by critics. ''IGN'' considered it better than the original version because of the new features. ''1Up.com'', also praised the new features and considered it almost a sequel, and ''Eurogamer'' said the new features helped place it among the best mobile games. '' GameDaily'' called it one of the best puzzle games ever made and said it almost perfectly complements the original. Multiple reviewers responded negatively to the sound quality but most said the game's overall quality outweighed it. ''GameDaily'' praised the music but criticized the way it operates independently of the gameplay. ''Pocket Gamer'' criticized the on-screen visuals that obscure the background artwork and concluded the sound does not do justice to the ''Lumines'' concept. ''Lumines Plus'' for PS2 received "mixed or average" reviews according to Metacritic. '' Game Informer'' said the visuals are less vibrant and noted five seconds of silence between level transitions. The magazine called it the least-impressive title in the ''Lumines'' series. ''1Up.com'' also criticized the intermittent silence between songs and expressed disappointment that songs from the original were missing. However, they praised the addition of skins from ''Lumines Live'' and ''Lumines II'', calling it a "''Lumines'' greatest hits". ''IGN'' was disappointed by the absence of new features, and said the "Plus" moniker is misleading, and would have preferred it to have the animated backgrounds and game modes introduced in ''Lumines II''. ''Eurogamer'' criticized the absence of songs from the original and said the new track selections make the game too arduous to play. ''GameSpot'' also noted the missing tracks but said the remaining Japanese tracks compensate for their absence. ''GamePro'' did not deem the game fun and said the music distracts from the gameplay. '' GamesRadar+'' shared similar complaints to ''IGN'' and ''Eurogamer'' and called attention to it the unused portions of the television screen, however, still considered deemed it a great game. For the PC ports, ''Gamezebo'' praised the WildTangent version for its simple gameplay and for not adding too many new gameplay power-ups. ''GamesRadar+'' complimented the game for being free but not for requiring to watch an ad before playing. ''GamesRadar+'' found some levels ugly and wasn't fond of needing to replay from the beginning to unlock more skins. When reviewing the Steam version, ''IGN'' criticized it for being split into two paid packages and was disappointed for not adding an online leaderboard or online functionality to multiplayer and considered those features vital to a PC release. When reviewing ''Lumines Remastered'', critics reacted positively. '' PCMag'' complimented the game and said it is as addictive and hypnotic as the original. ''Nintendo World Report'' noted the Trance Vibration feature working as advertised and called it "genius". ''Hardcore Gamer'' praised the music as enjoyable. ''GameSpot'' noted the Nintendo Switch version of the game looks better than prior handheld releases due to its cleaner animation but said it is not the best-looking game in the series. ''Eurogamer'' called the Switch version "euphoric", comparing the rumble feature to Mizuguchi's previous endeavor with ''Rez'' trance vibrator. '' Nintendo Life'' said the songs vary in quality and that each is catchy in its own way. The reviewer also complimented the visuals for being vibrant and full of animation without detracting from the gameplay. Despite having an overall positive response, some reviewers were disappointed in the absence of introducing an online multiplayer feature.


Sales and awards

''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' won several awards, including the 2005
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for Best Handheld Game, ''GameSpot'' 2005 PSP Game Of The Year, and '' Electronic Gaming Monthly'' 2005 Handheld Game Of The Year. '' IGN'' awarded the game for Best Puzzle, Best Artistic Design, and Best Original Score. It was awarded for Best Audio at the 4th Annual G.A.N.G. Awards. ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' also appeared on ''Game Informer'' "Top 50 Games of 2005" list" and ''Play'' ranked it the second-best PSP game in its "2005 Year in Review". '' GamesRadar+'' ranked the game as the sixth-best launch game of all time and ''Paste'' ranked it 12th-best. The mobile phone version was nominated for the Edge Mobile Awards at the 2006 Edinburgh Interactive Entertainment Festival. In 2005, ''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' was reported a sale of 180,000 units in Europe, 300,000 in North America, and 70,000 in Japan, totaling over half a million sales. On June 23, 2007, Amazon sales of the game increased by 5,900% within 24 hours due to hackers discovering a bug within the PSP, allowing them to install any program onto the device, including
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software. Sony released an update to prevent the exploit six days after its discovery.


Sequels and follow-ups

''Lumines: Puzzle Fusion'' was followed by multiple spin-offs and sequels, becoming the first entry in the ''Lumines'' series. The first set of sequels, ''Lumines II'' and ''Lumines Live!'', were developed at the same time. ''Lumines Live!'' introduces Mission Mode, Skin Edit mode, and an online multiplayer feature. It was released digitally on Xbox 360 via
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; its distribution began in Europe on October 18, 2006. ''Lumines II'' includes the new features introduced in ''Lumines Live!'', Sequencer mode, and music videos from
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,
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, and Hoobastank. It was made available for the PSP in North America on November 6, 2006. The games were followed by ''
Lumines Supernova is a puzzle video game, the fourth main entry in the ''Lumines'' series. The game was published and developed by Q Entertainment with original series creator Tetsuya Mizuguchi as the game designer and Katsumi Yokota as director. The game was rele ...
'', which adds a Dig Down mode but excludes online multiplayer. This game was released for PlayStation 3 via the
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on December 18, 2008. An iOS game called ''Lumines: Touch Fusion'' was made for touch controls; it has all of the features of the original except for the Versus modes. It was released on August 27, 2009. A follow-up called '' Lumines: Electronic Symphony'' was released on the
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in Japan on April 19, 2012. This version renames some of the modes and adds new features. The latest entry in the series, titled '' Lumines: Puzzle & Music'', was released on July 19, 2016, for iOS and
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.


References

;Translation ;Bibliography * ;Citation


External links


Official Bandai website
archived fro
the originalOfficial ''Lumines Mobile'' website
archived fro
the originalPC Version website
on WildTangent Games
Official ''Lumines: Remastered'' site
{{Authority control 2004 video games Bandai games Mobile games Multiplayer and single-player video games Nintendo Switch games PlayStation Portable games PlayStation 2 games PlayStation 4 games PlayStation Network games Puzzle-music video games Ubisoft games Q Entertainment games Video games scored by Jake Kaufman Video games scored by Takayuki Nakamura Video games developed in Japan Windows games Xbox One games Lumines Gameloft games