Torneko's Great Adventure
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is a 1993
role-playing video game A role-playing video game (commonly referred to as simply a role-playing game or RPG, as well as a computer role-playing game or CRPG) is a video game genre where the player controls the actions of a character (or several party members) immers ...
by Chunsoft. The first entry in the ''
Mystery Dungeon ''Mystery Dungeon'', known in Japan as , is a series of roguelike role-playing video games. Most were developed by Chunsoft, now Spike Chunsoft since the merging in 2012, and select games were developed by other companies with Chunsoft's permis ...
'' series, the game features
Torneko previously published as ''Dragon Warrior'' in North America until 2005, is a franchise of Japanese role-playing video games created by Armor Project (Yuji Horii), Bird Studio ( Akira Toriyama) and Sugiyama Kobo (Koichi Sugiyama) to its publ ...
, a merchant from '' Dragon Quest IV'', and his adventures around the Mystery Dungeon in search of items. ''Torneko's Great Adventure'' is the first spin-off game in the ''
Dragon Quest previously published as ''Dragon Warrior'' in North America until 2005, is a franchise of Japanese role-playing video games created by Armor Project (Yuji Horii), Bird Studio (Akira Toriyama) and Sugiyama Kobo (Koichi Sugiyama) to its publi ...
'' franchise. After failed attempts on creating a roguelike game in a home console, such as
Sega is a Japanese multinational corporation, multinational video game and entertainment company headquartered in Shinagawa, Tokyo. Its international branches, Sega of America and Sega Europe, are headquartered in Irvine, California and London, r ...
's ''
Fatal Labyrinth ''Fatal Labyrinth'', titled in Japan, is a role-playing video game developed and published by Sega. Originally available exclusively on the Sega Meganet multiplayer gaming service in 1990, it was later remade for the Sega Genesis in 1991 in vid ...
'' and ''
Dragon Crystal is a 1990 video game developed and published by Sega for their Game Gear and Master System. The game is similar to and shares assets with ''Fatal Labyrinth'', which was also released around that time. Story As the player rides a bicycle one late ...
'', the game was a success with over 800,000 copies sold, which led to Chunsoft turning it into a franchise and released a sequel, '' Mystery Dungeon 2: Shiren the Wanderer'', in 1995. The unreleased English version of the game was to be called ''Mystery Dungeon: Taloon's Great Adventure''.


Gameplay

The gameplay is similar to roguelike-style PC games. The main similarity is the heavy use of randomized dungeons and effects. The main character of the game is
Torneko previously published as ''Dragon Warrior'' in North America until 2005, is a franchise of Japanese role-playing video games created by Armor Project (Yuji Horii), Bird Studio ( Akira Toriyama) and Sugiyama Kobo (Koichi Sugiyama) to its publ ...
, originally localized as Taloon in North America, a merchant and playable character from ''Dragon Quest IV''. The player continues his story from ''Dragon Quest IV'', where he wishes to make his store famous and ventures into mystery dungeons to retrieve items to stock in his store. While Torneko explores the dungeons, he collects items and fights monsters, similar to ones found in ''Dragon Quest'' games. If he leaves the dungeon, he can sell off the items he found. He can also equip certain items. By saving up money, he can improve his home and shop.


Story

Torneko previously published as ''Dragon Warrior'' in North America until 2005, is a franchise of Japanese role-playing video games created by Armor Project (Yuji Horii), Bird Studio ( Akira Toriyama) and Sugiyama Kobo (Koichi Sugiyama) to its publ ...
, a weapon merchant for hire, lives in Lakanaba with his wife, Tessie, and son, Tipper. He has one dream: to own his own shop and make it the greatest one. As such, he sets out on a journey, searching for an iron safe and works on other various jobs, and finally opens a store thanks to the help of his wife. Soon after, Torneko hears a rumor that there is an amazing treasure in a mysterious dungeon that no one has ever seen. However, he is worried about the store and his family. Tessie understands him and decides to go alongside him to the "Mystery Dungeon". The family travel across oceans and mountains for years before finally arriving near the dungeon. He sets up store near a single large tree in a new village near it. Torneko tries to get permission from the King of the land to explore the dungeon, but he refuses to budge, saying it is too dangerous. However, he does not back down, and the King promises to give him permission only if he can retrieve the jewel box from the "Small Mystery Dungeon". Torneko brings back the King's jewelry box and gets permission to explore the "Mystery Dungeon". After successfully obtaining the permission, he ventures into the dungeon, gradually expanding his store with the income he earns from selling the items he brings back from his repeated adventures. Finally, he succeeds in bringing back the "Box of Happiness"; a rumored treasure hidden in the dungeon's innermost depths. When he opens the box, a small melody begins to play, which reveals it functions as a music box. The box, placed in Torneko's house, then plays a beautiful music which makes everyone near the store, including his family happy. Thus, Torneko's goal of obtaining the treasure in the "Mystery Dungeon" was realized. While the story concludes here, he continues to explore a new "More Mysterious Dungeon". While it is unknown how many years went by between the events of ''Dragon Quest IV'' and this game, the story continues in '' Torneko: The Last Hope'' (1999) and '' Torneko's Great Adventure 3'' (2002).


Development

''Torneko's Great Adventure'' was developed by Chunsoft, the developers for the first five ''Dragon Quest'' games. It was the first game in the ''Mystery Dungeon'' series of roguelike games, of which over thirty have been produced, including five ''Dragon Quest'' spin-offs. Letting players explore a familiar setting was part of lowering the difficulty and trying to broaden the appeal of the genre. After the launch of the Super Famicom in 1990, and finishing development for ''
Dragon Quest V ''Dragon Quest V: Hand of the Heavenly Bride'' is a role-playing video game and the fifth installment in the ''Dragon Quest'' video game series, second of the Zenithian Trilogy. Originally developed by Chunsoft and published by Enix Corporation, ' ...
'' in 1992, Chunsoft ceased working on the ''Dragon Quest'' series and began working on other genres, now known as the ''Sound Novel'' and ''Mystery Dungeon'' series. The latter series was initially based on the 1980s game ''Rogue'', which has spawned its own genre called roguelike. By the time the company released their first ''Sound Novel'' game in 1992, ''
Otogirisō is a visual novel produced and published by Chunsoft. Marketed by the company as a "sound novel" rather than a video game, it is the progenitor of the developer and publisher's sound novel series and of the format of electronic entertainment now ...
'', both
Koichi Nakamura is a Japanese video game designer. A programming prodigy, Nakamura gained fame while still in high school; in 1982, he entered Enix's first national programming contest and claimed runner-up prize with his entry, ''Door Door''. In 1984, he found ...
, founder of Chunsoft and co-creator of the ''Dragon Quest'' series, and Seiichiro Nagahata, one of the executive officer of Spike Chunsoft and corporate planning officer back then, wanted to work on a different genre. For a week, Nakamura played ''Rogue'', at the recommendation of Nagahata who has played the game frequently during university, trying to understand the game's appeal and concluded the high degree of challenge made the game rewarding. Unlike today's game software development, as soon as someone expressed their idea on a project, the team from company, who was small back then, started brainstorming without going through the approval process or budget which resulted in an unclear work division. When Nakamura and Nagahata explained the system introduced in ''Rogue'', which was used as template, there was a considerable resistance from employees at the beginning; as he talked about it, other staff members gradually left the discussion, disagreeing with his idea, or making excuses they were busy with other projects. However, they accepted this idea soon after. For the game's general setting, the team decided to use characters from a recognizable franchise in Japan. Nakamura directly wanted to put the ''Dragon Quest'' series in the project, while Nagahata thought of using '' The Legend of Zelda''. The latter never occurred due to the company being too small back then. After going with the former series, Nakamura then asked
Yuji Horii (also written as Yuuji Horii; born January 6, 1954) is a Japanese video game designer and scenario writer best known as the creator of the ''Dragon Quest'' series of role-playing games, supervising and writing the scenario for ''Chrono Trigger' ...
, scenarist and creator of the ''Dragon Quest'' series, for permission to use the ''Dragon Quest'' games as the template, on which he was given permission soon after. Horii participated in the development as an advisor, such as not having unidentified items early in the game. One major change from the normal ''Dragon Quest'' game was the replacement of the hero, who normally had a grand mission to save the world, with the kind of person who would go hunting for treasure in dungeons, but also due to the comical effect of failing in a dungeon in many ways. For this reason, Nakamura chose Torneko, the well-loved shopkeeper from ''Dragon Quest IV'', imagining that he was exploring for items to put in his shop. The "permadeath" feature, seen in most roguelike games where the game starts over if the player character dies, was adjusted so the player does not start from scratch and has a chance to return to the last dungeon he fainted at. Yuji Horii and
Akira Toriyama is a Japanese manga artist and character designer. He first achieved mainstream recognition for his highly successful manga series ''Dr. Slump'', before going on to create ''Dragon Ball'' (his best-known work) and acting as a character design ...
have also contributed in creating different angles of characters and monsters, with the help of drawings made by Nakamura, as their official artworks were always shown in a frontal view. Many new content were added to this game that differs from ''Rogue'' with the goal of making it accessible to anyone. A hunger system was added in the game so the player has to pay attention to the adventure through the dungeon, as once it is empty, Torneko's HP decreases for each turns. Furthermore, an earthquake was also added in dungeons as acting against players who would stall and farm in one floor, by forcefully drop Torneko to the next floor once the player reaches the maximum amount of turns. Then, a transluent map was added when exploring a dungeon, with dots representing the player, items, traps, and monsters in a floor. Finally, music and sound effects were introduced in this game, which was not common in the roguelike genre at the time. Most of the tweaks given in this roguelike game were later reused for future ''Mystery Dungeon'' games, with further adjustments for each of them. As for the game's balancing, Nagahata was the one in charge after an employee got confused with organizing data. He used Microsoft Excel's spreadsheets to organize data for items, monsters, and other content that relays on the genre. The game was published in 1993 and became the first video game to bear the "Mystery Dungeon" moniker. Nakamura conceived the series as Chunsoft's first original work. After its release in Japan, there were mentions of the game being developed for an overseas release, although it never happened. A PAL prototype originating from Germany was unearthed, proving that it was far in development. Its owner got it while working at Nintendo of Europe in Germany. A game counselor mentioned he has played the same prototype in the past, and was later awarded a Happy Music Box by Chunsoft, claiming he was "one of the first Americans to reach the bottom of the dungeon". The same prototype was later put on sale on eBay in 2022.


Music

As with other games in the ''Dragon Quest'' series, the musical score for the game was written by Koichi Sugiyama.
Sony Records Sony Records was a record label founded by R&B duo Ike & Tina Turner in 1963. It was not affiliated with Sony Group Corporation. Ike Turner produced singles by members of the Kings of Rhythm and the Ikettes on Sony Records. Records on the label ...
released the soundtrack, titled ''Suite Torneko's Great Adventure: Musical Chemistry'', on October 21, 1993, in Japan. It contains eight arranged tracks performed by a
chamber orchestra Chamber music is a form of classical music that is composed for a small group of instruments—traditionally a group that could fit in a palace chamber or a large room. Most broadly, it includes any art music that is performed by a small numbe ...
, as well as three tracks containing original game music. The album was reprinted on October 7, 2009. Two pieces of music from the game were performed by the Tokyo City Philharmonic Orchestra at the Game Music Concert 3, the year of the game's release.


Release

The game was promoted with an exceptionally high-budget television commercial. It had a running time of 30 seconds, unusually long for Japanese commercials of the time, and consisted almost entirely of claymation footage filmed to run at twenty-four frames per second. ''Torneko's Great Adventure'' was released on September 19, 1993, exclusively in Japan, with a catchphrase that will be re-used throughout the series; "The RPG that can be played 1,000 times".


Reception

In November 1993, '' Famitsu'' magazine's Reader Cross Review gave the game an 8 out of 10 and it earned the Gold Hall of Fame. It won the Grand Prize at the 1993 Japan Software Awards. In 2006, the game was voted number 78 by the readers of '' Famitsu'' magazine in its top 100 games of all time. Although it has sold less than the ''Dragon Quests mainline titles, the success behind its sales is due to its crossover with the latter, which is a cultural phenomenon in Japan. Eventually, the game reached over 800,000 copies sold in its lifetime. The game spawned the ''
Mystery Dungeon ''Mystery Dungeon'', known in Japan as , is a series of roguelike role-playing video games. Most were developed by Chunsoft, now Spike Chunsoft since the merging in 2012, and select games were developed by other companies with Chunsoft's permis ...
'' series and two sequels starring Torneko, '' Torneko: The Last Hope'' in 1999 and '' Torneko's Great Adventure 3'' in 2002.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Torneko's Great Adventure 1993 video games Chunsoft games Dragon Quest spin-off games Japan-exclusive video games Mystery Dungeon Roguelike video games Role-playing video games Single-player video games Super Nintendo Entertainment System games Super Nintendo Entertainment System-only games Top-down video games Video games developed in Japan Video games scored by Koichi Sugiyama Video games using procedural generation