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''Puzzle Bobble 2'' is a tile-matching video game by Taito. The first sequel to ''
Puzzle Bobble internationally known as ''Bust-a-Move'', is a 1994 tile-matching puzzle arcade game developed and published by Taito. It is based on the 1986 arcade game ''Bubble Bobble'', featuring characters and themes from that game. Its characteristically ...
'', it is also known in Europe and North America as ''Bust-A-Move Again'' for arcades and ''Bust-A-Move 2: Arcade Edition'' for home consoles. Released into the arcades in 1995, home conversions followed for the
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,
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, Nintendo 64, and Windows platforms. The game was included in ''
Taito Legends 2 ''Taito Legends 2'' is the sequel to ''Taito Legends'' and is a follow-up collection of 39 (or 43, see below) Taito arcade games for Xbox, PlayStation 2 and Microsoft Windows. As the former collection, it has been derived from the Japan exclu ...
'', but the US arcade version was included on the US PS2 version instead. Further ports for the
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,
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, and Xbox One were released by City Connection alongside ''
Puzzle Bobble 3 ''Puzzle Bobble 3'' (also known as ''Bust-A-Move 3'') is an action puzzle video game developed by Taito. The second sequel to ''Puzzle Bobble'', it was released for arcades in September 1996 and later ported to the Sega Saturn, PlayStation, Game B ...
'' in February 2023. The game builds on the original by adding a tournament style variation on the two player game for play against the computer and by adding a branching map to the one player game, allowing the player to periodically select one of two groups of five levels to play next, leading to different game endings. Some of the contestants in the new tournament mode are based on characters from Bubble Bobble, including variations on a ''Monsta'' and a ''Mighta''. Some versions of the game, including the PlayStation, feature time trial competitions in which a single player attempts to finish simple rounds quickly enough to beat previous time records or two players simultaneously attempt to beat the records and each other. Completion of the single player game gives the player a code which can be entered to unlock 'Another World' for the single player game, which features subtle changes to the existing levels to increase their difficulty and changes to all backdrops to resemble levels from ''Bubble Bobble''. The various enemies from ''Bubble Bobble'' also make an appearance in the background of the credits sequence.


North American version

The North American version of the original arcade release is much different than the other versions. One of the most major changes in this version is that Bub and Bob were removed from the game and replaced with a pair of disembodied hands. Also, the characters that were in the Vs. CPU mode were removed and replaced with a generic computer. The backgrounds from the original version were also removed and replaced with 15 new backgrounds, but this also means that the backgrounds get looped in the Puzzle mode, which is 30 stages long. The audio was also changed, and the voices in the game were removed, even though they were in English anyway. These changes were only made for the Taito F3 System version, since the Neo Geo and console releases are based on the original Japanese version. If this version was played in an emulator, it would have the Japanese audio, although the music would cut out in some levels. This emulation error was fixed in 2006 - although not before it appeared in ''
Taito Legends 2 ''Taito Legends 2'' is the sequel to ''Taito Legends'' and is a follow-up collection of 39 (or 43, see below) Taito arcade games for Xbox, PlayStation 2 and Microsoft Windows. As the former collection, it has been derived from the Japan exclu ...
''.


''Puzzle Bobble 2X''

Taito later repacked the game with an optional alternative set of levels and some new attract mode animations (including holiday-themed ones), under the titles ''Puzzle Bobble 2X'' and ''Bust-A-Move 2X''. Ports of ''Bust-A-Move 2'' to MS-DOS and Sega Saturn are of ''Bust-A-Move 2X'' and additionally include a level editor/designer. A port of ''2X'' was made to the PlayStation but was not released until some time after a port of ''Bust-A-Move 2'' was released, and didn't see an international release.


North American cover art

In North America, print advertisements for the Saturn and PlayStation editions featured a picture of several large blue balls with human faces trapped inside, moaning in apparent agony, with white sticks forcing their eyes open. The shots of the game packaging in the lower right corner of the ad show that the North American release of the game was to use the same cover art as the PAL release. Instead, possibly due to a mix-up by Acclaim's marketing department, the North American release of both Saturn and PlayStation editions uses the main art from the advertisement as their cover art. This cover earned a place on
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's Top Ten Worst Covers list, with journalist Kevin Bowen pointing out that the disturbing imagery was likely to frighten away the game's young target audience. The later MS-DOS and Nintendo 64 releases from Acclaim would use the proper cover art used on the PAL releases.


Reception


Promotion

The game was showcased at JAMMA 95 along with '' Dangerous Curves'' and ''
Gekirindan is a 1995 vertically scrolling shooter arcade video game originally developed and published by Taito in Japan, America and Europe. Set in the year 3195, where a robot known as "Huge Boss" stole a newly developed time machine to travel back in t ...
''.


Commercial

In Japan, ''Game Machine'' listed ''Puzzle Bobble 2'' on their 15 October 1995 issue as being the fourth most-successful arcade game of the month. ''Game Machine'' also listed ''Puzzle Bobble 2X'' on their 1 February 1996 issue as being the ninth most-successful arcade game of the month. In the United Kingdom, it was among the nineteen best-selling PlayStation games of 1996, according to HMV.


Critical

A ''
Next Generation Next Generation or Next-Generation may refer to: Publications and literature * ''Next Generation'' (magazine), video game magazine that was made by the now defunct Imagine Media publishing company * Next Generation poets (2004), list of young ...
'' critic gave the game a rave review, calling it "One of the most addictive puzzle games in the arcades right now". He praised the challenging gameplay and the "fascinating" trick of bouncing bubbles off the walls to ricochet into the right spot, and concluded, "It's fast, fun, and because of the title's bright, innocent looks and unpretentious simplicity, it's almost unfair." A brief review of the PlayStation version in ''Next Generation'' said it was "sure to please, especially in two-player mode." The four reviewers of '' Electronic Gaming Monthly'' applauded the game for its addictive puzzle play, its large amount of content, the usage of tricky bank shots in addition to the color-matching traditional to action puzzlers, and the fierce competitiveness of the two-player mode. Rad Automatic also commented positively on these aspects in '' Sega Saturn Magazine'', and said that though the game is best with two players, the single-player Puzzle Mode makes the game worth buying even for those who have no one to play with. Echoing ''Next Generation'', he remarked that "whilst ''Bust-a-Move 2'' maintains the sweet harmless exterior of a sherbert
bonbon A bonbon is a small chocolate confection. They are usually filled with liqueur or other sweet alcoholic ingredients, and sold wrapped in coloured foil. Ingredients Through the Western world, bonbons are usually small candies but vary by region i ...
, inside beats the addictive heart of a malteser." ''Electronic Gaming Monthly'' named the Saturn and PlayStation versions a runner-up for Puzzle Game of the Year (behind '' Tetris Attack''). It was also a finalist for the Computer Game Developers Conference's 1996 "Best Trivia or Puzzle Game" Spotlight Award, but lost the prize to ''
You Don't Know Jack XL ''You Don't Know Jack'' is a video game released in 1995, and the first release in the '' You Don't Know Jack'' video game series. History Jellyvision's website has this explanation as to why ''You Don't Know Jack'' was made: "Way back in the ea ...
''. In 1996,
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ranked the game 20th on their "Top 100 Games of All Time." In ''PC Zone'', Charlie Brooker critically called the Windows version a bad conversion with slowdowns, clunky animation, jerky aiming and blurry high resolution. They recommended buying the Game Boy version instead.


References


External links

*Taito Corporation page: , * *
''Puzzle Bobble 2''
at
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