Blast Works: Build, Trade, Destroy

Blast Works: Build, Trade, Destroy

North American box art
Developer(s) Budcat Creations
Publisher(s) Majesco Entertainment
Platform(s) Wii
Release date(s)

‹See Tfd›

  • NA: June 10, 2008 (2008-06-10)[1]
  • EU: April 3, 2009 (2009-04-03)
Genre(s) Scrolling shooter
Mode(s) Single player
2-4 Cooperative multiplayer

Blast Works: Build, Trade, Destroy is a side-scrolling shooter video game for the Wii based on the PC game Tumiki Fighters created by Kenta Cho.

Majesco and Budcat Creations released the game on June 10, 2008 in North America. Blast Works' release date in Europe was delayed to April 3, 2009, and there is no word yet on a Japanese release.

The game features 3D graphics, with enemies and obstacles represented in the form of polygonal toy blocks and propellers. The game also introduces extensive editing tools for the player to make custom content such as entire levels from scratch.

Gameplay

The player controls an aircraft on a two-dimensional plane. As the player destroys enemies, their debris fall off the screen below. If the player manages to touch these pieces of debris with their ship before they disappear from the screen, these pieces affix themselves to the player's plane in the positions they were caught, providing extra mass and firepower.

The extra parts, which reanimate and continue to fire their own unique weapons, can serve as shields against enemy projectiles (each part breaks into pieces and falls off upon hit), and all of the augmentations can be retracted into the original ship.

There are a wide variety of different enemies, which provide varying patterns of fire and numbers of points.

TUMIKI Fighters

Main article: ABA Games

TUMIKI Fighters was first released in 2004. It is written in the D programming language, with graphics drawn with OpenGL. Unlike the rest of Kenta Cho's shooters, TUMIKI Fighters has specific levels, non-random enemy placement, and a definite ending. The game was released as free software.

The game's name is derived from the Japanese word tsumiki (積み木), meaning "building blocks"; this word may also be romanized as tumiki.

Blast Works

On June 27, 2007, Majesco issued a press release announcing a Wii version of TUMIKI Fighters, titled Blast Works: Build, Trade & Destroy.

Added to the game is a 2-4 player cooperative mode, ship and level editors, and a "Hangar," which allows players (while inside) to purchase various ship upgrades; the building itself can be defended from attackers, via the motion controls of the Wii Remote. WiiConnect24 elements will also feature in the game, including online leaderboards and the swapping of custom ships and levels among friends.[2]

The game disc will, in addition to Blast Works, also contain playable versions of rRootage, Gunroar, and Torus Trooper (other games made by Kenta Cho) as unlockables, in addition to the original TUMIKI Fighters itself.[3]

Editor

Blast Works comes with a powerful editing tool that allows extensive customization to the game. Players can construct their own ships, enemies and bosses with the editor, as well create their own backgrounds.

When designing enemies, the player can manipulate projectile patterns, sound effects, movement patterns, hit boxes, and more in the Ship Editor portion of the Blast Works Editor. The player also has the option of fully customizing the ship that they play as. For example, the ship builder lets the player view their ship from many different angles, allowing them to add new pieces, such as wings or weapons, simply by adding shapes to their ship. The basic shapes can be combined to create even more complex constructs, and there are a few moving shapes the player can add to give their ship a bit more life. The player is also given full control over the size, shape, and color of any object they create. This ranges from their main ship to buildings created for custom levels and even enemy craft.

The level designer (the same tool the game's developers used to create the built-in levels that come with the game) also features powerful capabilities. The player can set the basics, such as color scheme or background, then drag and drop enemies into their custom level from either a list of pre-built enemies or custom ships previously created. The player can also set trigger events that can change the orientation of your ship, the behavior of enemy ships, or the movement of the game camera. The player can also add a number of different special effects to their level such as a Virtual Boy-like effect, which turns everything in the level to red and black, or a water effect, to make background oceans or the level itself appear underwater. After constructing a level, the player can preview it before importing it into the game.

Sharing content

Majesco has set up a website (www.blastworksdepot.com) specifically for players to upload (after registering) and download user-created levels, shapes, objects, and enemies from the website to their Wii. Users can browse by levels, enemies, or shapes, with all content including a thumbnail preview and a rating.

Reception

Blast Works received a score of 8.5/10 in the June 2008 issue of Nintendo Power.

Blast Works also received a score of 8.1/10 by IGN.

Blast Works was also reviewed by three testers in the June 2008 issue of EGM and received an A, A-, and B-.

The game has thus far seen critical acclaim. It has been applauded for its complex set of editing tools which give players a lot of flexibility in terms of creating their own ships, enemies, levels, and so forth. Also, the game's online "Blast Works Depot" component has been praised for its ease of use and the ability to easily share custom designs, greatly adding to the game's replay value.

The single player campaign has often been overlooked because of the strong creation-based aspect of the game. Most reviewers have said that the campaign portion of the game is challenging but, unfortunately, offers little variety and also doesn't make for very enjoyable co-operative play because there is so much happening at once that it's often hard to keep up with the action and which player is doing what.

Also, some reviewers have complained that the editors - although important assets - tend to be overly complex at times, making for a slightly steep learning curve and requiring much patience from the player.

It received multiple nominations from IGN in its 2008 video game awards, including Best Shooting Game[4] and Most Innovative Design.[5]

References

External links

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