Timeball
{{Short description|1990 video game}}
{{about|the video game|the timekeeping object|Time ball}}
{{unreferenced|date=July 2012}}
{{Infobox video game
|title = Timeball
|image = Timeball cover art.jpg
|caption = TurboGrafx-16 cover art
|publisher = TurboGrafx-16
NEC, Hudson Soft
X68000, Game Boy
Broderbund, Tonkin House
|developer = Now Production
|programmer = Manuel Constantinidis (original game)
|released = JP: December 1990
NA: September 12, 1991
|genre = Puzzle
|modes = Single-player, two-player (Game Boy)
|platforms = TurboGrafx-16, Game Boy, X68000
}}
Timeball is a puzzle video game released by NEC for the TurboGrafx-16. The object of the game is to guide a ball along pieces of track by moving tiles like a sliding puzzle. The game's name in Japan is Blodia, an anagram of Diablo, the title of a computer game upon which Blodia is based. Versions of Blodia were released exclusively in Japan for the original Game Boy and the X68000. A spin-off titled Blodia Land: Puzzle Quest was released for the Famicom, replacing the ball with cartoon dinosaur-like characters. These versions were developed by Tonkin House and published by Broderbund.
Gameplay
The grid on screen is composed of tiles. Some tiles have a piece of road, and a black tile represents "the void", an area where one can drag the tile nearby in order to complete a road which will be taken by a ball that will follow the path. Players must arrange the tiles such that the ball traverses all sections of track. The ball can be sped up by pressing a button. If the ball reaches a tile without a piece of track, it falls out of play.
The game also includes a level editor which allows for the creation of custom puzzles.
An earlier "prototype" version without the level editor was published for the TI-99/4a and other computers as "Diablo" in 1985.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{MobyGames|id=/diablo_|name=Timeball (Diablo)}}
- {{MobyGames|id=/blodia|name=Blodia for Game Boy}}
Category:Multiplayer and single-player video games