SonSon
{{Short description|1984 video game}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}
{{More citations needed|date=January 2025}}{{Infobox video game
| title = SonSon
| image = SonsonCover.jpg
| developer = Capcom (Arcade)
Micronics (Famicom)
| publisher = Capcom
| designer = Yoshiki Okamoto
| composer = Ayako Mori
Manami Matsumae (Famicom)
| released = Arcade {{vgrelease|JP|July 1984|NA|1984}}
Famicom {{vgrelease|JP|February 8, 1986{{cite web |title=SonSon Release Information for NES |url=https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/nes/578273-sonson/data |website=GameFAQs}}}}
| genre = Shoot 'em up/run and gun
| modes = Single-player, multiplayer
}}
{{Nihongo foot|SonSon|ソンソン|SonSon|group=lower-alpha|lead=yes}} is a 1984 platform video game developed and published by Capcom for arcades. It is loosely based on the Chinese novel Journey to the West. The player assumes the role of a monkey boy (who is patterned after Sun Wukong from the story) and fights their way from one side to another, eventually reaching the statue of Buddha. One battles bats, rats, and mad bombers along the way with his fighting rod that shoots balls of fire.
The game was ported from the arcade to the Family Computer in Japan. A sequel, titled SonSon II, heavily based on Black Tiger, was released for the PC Engine, published by NEC Avenue. According to composer Manami Matsumae, the PC Engine title was made by Capcom, one of the few games that they developed for the console themselves.{{cite web |last1=Kemps |first1=Heidi |title=Interview: Manami Matsumae, former Capcom and current freelance composer at BraveWave Music {{!}} Gaming.moe |url=http://gaming.moe/?p=1473 |website=Gaming.moe |access-date=10 November 2021 |date=29 February 2016}}
Gameplay
The game is a 2-D sidescrolling platformer. The screen scrolls automatically, only stopping to fight major enemies. The screen features six continuous platforms that occasionally feature small gaps. Sonson and Tonton walk automatically across these platforms. Pressing up or down will cause them to jump up or down to the next platform. Pressing left causes them to move more slowly than the screen scrolls, essentially continuing to move forward but at a reduced pace. Pressing right does the opposite - SonSon and TonTon will move across the platforms faster than the screen scrolls. The duo have only one attack - the ability to fire energy blasts from their staves. Touching an enemy or an unfriendly projectile causes the player to lose a life. If a player has any additional lives, they will return to the screen riding on a cloud that will give them temporary invincibility. If the player presses the control stick in any direction, the cloud will disappear and the character will resume its usual walking mode. The cloud will eventually disappear on its own if the control stick is not used.
Power-ups come in the form of various fruits which produce points (with enough points giving the player an extra life). Gathering certain fruit will cause all enemies currently on a screen to turn into point-bearing fruits. Walking across certain platforms will randomly cause a bamboo shoot to sprout, yielding many extra points.
It is possible to play the game co-operatively with partner who plays as TonTon (who is Zhu Bajie in the original story).
Reception
In Japan, Game Machine listed SonSon on their August 1, 1984 issue as being the fifth most-successful table arcade unit of the month.{{cite magazine|title=Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - テーブル型TVゲーム機 (Table Videos)|magazine=Game Machine|issue=241|publisher=Amusement Press, Inc.|date=1 August 1984|page=27|lang=ja}}
Notes
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{KLOV game|id=9620}}
{{Journey to the West}}
{{Capcom}}
Category:Cooperative video games
Category:Multiplayer and single-player video games
Category:Nintendo Entertainment System games
Category:PlayStation Network games
Category:Video games based on Journey to the West
Category:Video games developed in Japan
Category:Video games scored by Manami Matsumae
Category:Video games scored by Tamayo Kawamoto
Category:Video games set in India