Fossil Fighters (video game): Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|2008 video game}} |
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{{Long plot|date=April 2022}} |
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{{Infobox video game |
{{Infobox video game |
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|title= Fossil Fighters |
|title= Fossil Fighters |
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'''''Fossil Fighters''''', known as {{nihongo foot|''We Are Fossil Diggers''|ぼくらはカセキホリダー|Bokura wa Kasekihoridā|lead=yes|group=lower-alpha}} in Japan,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fossilfighters.com/html/making-of/ |title=The Making of Fossil Fighters - Developer Interviews {{!}} Nintendo DS Game |accessdate=30 November 2011 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090810115523/http://www.fossilfighters.com/html/making-of |archivedate=August 10, 2009}}</ref> is a [[2008 in video gaming|2008]] [[video game]] developed by [[Nintendo SPD]], [[Red Entertainment]], [[M2 (game developer)|M2]], and [[Artdink]] and published by [[Nintendo]]. It was first released in Japan on April 17, 2008 and was later released in North America on August 10, 2009,<ref name="usrelease"/> and in Australia on September 17, 2009.<ref>{{cite web|title=Fossil Fighters |url=https://www.nintendo.com.au/index.php?action=catalogue&prodcat_id=43&prod_id=19428 |accessdate=29 December 2010 |publisher=Nintendo (Australia) |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716231115/http://www.nintendo.com.au/index.php?action=catalogue&prodcat_id=43&prod_id=19428 |archivedate=16 July 2011 }}</ref> |
'''''Fossil Fighters''''', known as {{nihongo foot|''We Are Fossil Diggers''|ぼくらはカセキホリダー|Bokura wa Kasekihoridā|lead=yes|group=lower-alpha}} in Japan,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fossilfighters.com/html/making-of/ |title=The Making of Fossil Fighters - Developer Interviews {{!}} Nintendo DS Game |accessdate=30 November 2011 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090810115523/http://www.fossilfighters.com/html/making-of |archivedate=August 10, 2009}}</ref> is a [[2008 in video gaming|2008]] [[video game]] developed by [[Nintendo SPD]], [[Red Entertainment]], [[M2 (game developer)|M2]], and [[Artdink]] and published by [[Nintendo]]. It was first released in Japan on April 17, 2008, and was later released in North America on August 10, 2009,<ref name="usrelease"/> and in Australia on September 17, 2009.<ref>{{cite web|title=Fossil Fighters |url=https://www.nintendo.com.au/index.php?action=catalogue&prodcat_id=43&prod_id=19428 |accessdate=29 December 2010 |publisher=Nintendo (Australia) |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716231115/http://www.nintendo.com.au/index.php?action=catalogue&prodcat_id=43&prod_id=19428 |archivedate=16 July 2011 }}</ref> |
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A sequel titled ''Super Kasekihoridā'',<ref name="announce">{{cite web|url=http://www.gonintendo.com/viewstory.php?id=135753|work=GoNintendo|title=Fossil Fighters getting a sequel|author=RawmeatCowboy|date=9 September 2010|access-date=7 November 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711111143/http://www.gonintendo.com/viewstory.php?id=135753|archive-date=11 July 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> was released in Japan on November 18, 2010.<ref name="sequelOW">{{Cite web|url=https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ds/vdej/index.html|title=Super Kasekihoridā|publisher=Nintendo (Japan)}}</ref> It was released outside Japan originally titled as ''Super Fossil Fighters'', but |
A sequel titled ''Super Kasekihoridā'',<ref name="announce">{{cite web|url=http://www.gonintendo.com/viewstory.php?id=135753|work=GoNintendo|title=Fossil Fighters getting a sequel|author=RawmeatCowboy|date=9 September 2010|access-date=7 November 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711111143/http://www.gonintendo.com/viewstory.php?id=135753|archive-date=11 July 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> was released in Japan on November 18, 2010.<ref name="sequelOW">{{Cite web|url=https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ds/vdej/index.html|title=Super Kasekihoridā|publisher=Nintendo (Japan)}}</ref> It was released outside Japan, originally titled as ''Super Fossil Fighters'', but changed to ''[[Fossil Fighters: Champions]]'', released in North America on November 14, 2011. A [[Nintendo 3DS]] entry, ''[[Fossil Fighters: Frontier]]'', was released in Japan in February 2014,<ref>{{Cite web |title=カセキホリダー ムゲンギア |url=https://www.nintendo.co.jp/3ds/ahrj/index.html |website=www.nintendo.co.jp}}</ref> and in North America in 2015.<ref>{{Citation |last=Nintendo |title=Nintendo 3DS - Fossil Fighters: Frontier E3 2014 Trailer |date=2014-06-11 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07qM4X15sMY |accessdate=2016-10-02}}</ref> |
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==Gameplay== |
==Gameplay== |
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The basic strategy of ''Fossil Fighters'' is to use attacks with an Attack Zone vivosaur while Support Zone vivosaurs apply statistical bonuses to the player's Attack Zone or statistical penalties to the enemy's Attack Zone. However, ''Fossil Fighters'' contains much strategic diversity. A damaged Attack Zone vivosaur may be "escaped" to the Escape Zone when weakened, but a Support Zone vivosaur must enter the Attack Zone and take its place. The now-empty Support Zone will be filled by the escaped vivosaur in two turns. |
The basic strategy of ''Fossil Fighters'' is to use attacks with an Attack Zone vivosaur while Support Zone vivosaurs apply statistical bonuses to the player's Attack Zone or statistical penalties to the enemy's Attack Zone. However, ''Fossil Fighters'' contains much strategic diversity. A damaged Attack Zone vivosaur may be "escaped" to the Escape Zone when weakened, but a Support Zone vivosaur must enter the Attack Zone and take its place. The now-empty Support Zone will be filled by the escaped vivosaur in two turns. |
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''Fossil Fighters'' uses a system of elemental balance where each vivosaur has an elemental affinity |
''Fossil Fighters'' uses a system of elemental balance where each vivosaur has an elemental affinity: Fire is weak to Water, Water is weak to Air, Air is weak to Earth, Earth is weak to Fire, and Neutral-element vivosaurs have no elemental strength or weakness. Certain mythical vivosaurs, only granted to the player in special circumstances, are of the "Legendary" element, which functions identically to Neutral-element vivosaurs. |
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
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After arriving on Vivosaur Island, the Hero confronts a thief and encounters a young girl named Rosie, whose Dino Medals were stolen. After defeating him, the Hero discovers a mysterious idol. |
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After arriving on Vivosaur Island, the Hero enters a local hotel, where the manager gives him instructions and sends him to a trial Dig Site for first-hand Fossil Battle practice. Once he completes the required training, he gains access to his first official Dig Site, the Greenhorn Plains. Upon arriving at said location, a man called Medal-Dealer Joe steals everyone's Dino Medals. The Hero encounters a young girl named Rosie, whose medals have also been stolen. She informs him that his medals are still safe and that he must fight the criminal in a Fossil Battle. A victory results in Medal-Dealer Joe being arrested, and everyone's Dino Medals being returned safely. Rosie takes interest in the Hero, and decides to accompany him on his journey. Once the duo return to the Island, it is announced that Level-Up Battles have begun. Both Rosie and the Hero successfully complete their battles, bringing them one step closer to becoming a Master. |
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Soon after, the Hero gains access to Knotwood Forest, and helps its inhabitants, the Digadig tribe, defend their treasures from the BB Bandits. During his journey, the Hero gets two more idols, fighting the BB Bandits along the way. A mysterious girl named Duna appears to be following him. |
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Soon after they level up, a new Dig Site, known as Knotwood Forest, becomes available. This particular location is home to a tribe called the Digadigs. They plea that the Hero must defend their treasures from the wretched BB Bandits. When investigating the Digadigmid, the Hero encounters a woman by the name of Nevada Montecarlo. The two later team up and take on Vivian, the leader of the BB Bandit Trio. In the meantime, Rosie becomes cursed and is only able to speak in a similar manner to those of the Digadigs. This curse will last throughout the majority of the game. Once the villains flee and peace is restored, Nevada and the Hero, who found a mysterious but tacky idol, part ways. He and Rosie then head back to the Island to compete in their second Level-Up Battle, in which both emerge victoriously. |
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⚫ | The next day, Rosie is kidnapped by the BB Bandits, the Hero offers the idols in exchange for her safety. After battling Rex, Snivels, and Vivian, the BB Bandits' leader is revealed to be Police Chief Bartholomew Bullwort. The Hero succeeds in getting him arrested and saving Rosie. Meanwhile, Rosie's grandfather, Mr. Richmond, suspects that the bandits were hired to steal the idols. |
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The Hero then visits the Rivet Ravine site where a Fighter's Seminar is taking place. The fossils will now be seen in different colors depending on the type. A man named McJunker is trying to fix mine carts. The Hero brings him his tools from the BB Bandits and he reveals that Holt is his apprentice. Holt gives the player an Electromonite for McJunker after a battle. After the mine carts are fixed the Hero goes deeper into the cave battles the BB Bandits again, and finds another idol. |
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Dr. Diggins requests that the Hero search for an idol near Mt. Lavaflow. After he finds the idol, Duna demands him to give it to her, and she is revealed to be a dinosaur-like alien called a Dinaurian. After Duna runs off, Rosie meets up with the Hero and they find that the BB Bandits have taken over Vivosaur Island. Bullwort captures the Hero and Rosie, but Rex, Snivels, and Vivian, no longer wanting to take orders from him, help the two escape. The Digadig chief reveals that Bullwort's vivosaur, Frigisaurus, was rivals with another legendary vivosaur known as the Ignosaurus, whom they revive to help defeat it. |
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After leveling up again, the Hero is now able to visit Bottomsup Bay, with a diving mask. He is tasked with getting a ribbon for a pirate ghost. An eccentric man named Nick Nack has it but he'll only give it for a molted bug shell, a sandal fossil, and dentures of a denture shark in return. The BB Bandits try to stop them, but the Hero and Rosie succeed in giving back the ribbon and get yet another idol as a reward. A mysterious girl named Duna appears to be following them. |
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The next day, Duna and another Dinaurian named Raptin arrive to take the idols and reveal them to be Sub-Idolcomps, which are intended to wipe out humanity. Using Raptin's device, the Hero and Diggins infiltrate the ship and find the Sub-Idolcomps connected to a larger Idolcomp as the Dinaurian king, Dynal, reveals Project: Mother Planet, their plan to revert humans to [[amoeba]]s and start over. Dynal tells Duna to press the switch, but she refuses, having learned the good of humanity. Dynal is furious at her betrayal and presses the switch himself, but Diggins causes it to malfunction, sending himself and the Sub-Idolcomp back in time to the [[Jurassic]] period. Dynal attempts to kill the Hero and Duna, but the two teleport to safety. |
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⚫ | The next day, Rosie is kidnapped |
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Duna reveals to Richmond that the goal of Project: Mother Planet is to recreate the Dinaurian's home planet, as the planet-eating Guhnash destroyed it. Additionally, the Dinaurians created humanity using seeds derived from their own DNA, with the Idolcomp having been created to monitor evolution and enable humans to evolve into Dinaurians. However, the Sub-Idolcomps were lost in an accident and ended up on Vivosaur Island, so the Dinaurians hired the BB Bandits to search for them. Dynal's Sub-Idolcomp was shattered into five fragments while traveling through time; after gathering them, Duna reveals that it is missing its core processor, which is located in the Dinaurian ship. Raptin appears and attacks the Hero to get the fragment, but the latter is victorious. |
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After another level-up tournament, Rosie thanks the Hero for saving him so many times. Dr. Diggins, who has been examining the idols, asks the Hero to go find one more at Mt. Lavaflow. The Hero encounters large lava rocks blocking his path, Duna arrives to get rid of them. After he finds the idol, she demands him to give it to her. Suddenly, the heat disrupts Duna's "holographic transformation technology", revealing her to be a dinosaur-like alien. After attempting to attack the player, Duna gets crushed by a lava rock from an earthquake. The Hero saves her by using his digging tools, much to her confusion. After Duna runs off, Rosie meets up with the Hero, but when they return they find that Vivosaur island has been taken over by the BB Bandits. Bullwort uses the legendary Vivosaur Frigisaurus to freeze the Hero and Rosie. Hero and Rosie are imprisoned, and Rex, Snivels, and Vivian help them escape to Diggins as they no longer want to take orders from Bullwort. The Chieftain of the Digadigs reveals that the Frigisaurus was rivals with another legendary Vivosaur known as the Ignosaurus. The Hero, with the help of Rex find the Ignosaurus fossil at Mt. Lavaflow, but Bullwort uses his Imperva-Ray on it making the fossil indestructible. Duna reverses the effects and the Ignosaurus is soon revived, it defeats the Frigisaurus and Bullwort is arrested. After defeating the champion Fossil Fighter, Saurhead, Duna reveals to the Hero that she is a Dinaurian, an alien race that believes humans were a mistake. |
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The two revive Diggins back in the Fossil Center, with him having found stone-sleep technology in the ship and used it to survive into the present. Back on the spaceship, the Sub-Idolcomps reveal that the Dinaurians' seeds died in the ocean and that humans originated from their own planet. While the Sub-Idolcomps liked them, the Main Idolcomp wanted to destroy them, so it instead sent a signal to Guhnash to have him devour Earth. Upon returning to Earth, Dynal helps the Hero teleport to fight Guhnash, but he can only send one additional person for support, with the Hero having to choose either Rosie or Duna. The two save Earth, but Guhnash's energy interferes with the teleporter, so the two use stone-sleep to survive the return to Earth. Upon returning, the Hero is revived, but his companion is not: if Duna was chosen, her petrification is seemingly irreversible, and if Rosie was chosen, she loses her memories. However, the Digadig chief teaches the Hero a dance that restores her to normal. |
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The next day, when the Hero and Rosie go to see how her grandfather is doing with the idols, Duna and another Dinaurian named Raptin arrive to take them. They reveal the idols to be Sub-Idolcomps and are going to be used to wipe out the human race. Raptin turns Rosie into a [[Eutriconodonta|Triconodonta]], knocks the Hero out and escapes with Duna. Rosie got Raptin's device that transports people their spaceship, after getting masks from Saurhead, the Hero and Dr. Diggins infiltrate the ship. The two find the Sub-Idolcomps connected to a much larger Idolcomp. Suddenly, the two hide as Duna and the king of the Dinaurians, Dynal, come in. He reveals that their plan is to use the Idolcomp to revert all humans on Earth to [[amoeba]]s and start over, the plan is called '''Project: Mother Planet'''. Dynal tells Duna to press the switch but she refuses, she has come to accept that humans and just as intelligent as Dinaurians. Dynal is furious that she wants the plan shut down as he doesn't see it the same way, so he goes to do it himself but the Hero jumps in his way and battles him. Despite losing, Dynal manages to press the switch on the main Idolcomp. But Diggins manages to disconnect a Sub-Idolcomp so it wouldn't work. It also ends up sending him back in time to the [[Jurassic]] period, but the Sub-Idolcomp was with him. King Dynal attempts to kill the Hero and Duna but the two teleport to safety. |
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Duna reveals to Mr. Richmond that the plan of '''Project: Mother Planet''' is to recreate the Dinaurian home planet. After it was destroyed by the giant planet devourer, Guhnash, the Dinaurians searched space for a new home. When they found Earth, they used their DNA to create seeds to plant on the planet. However, the seeds took a different evolutionary path: humans. The Idolcomp was created to monitor the evolutions and regress humans back to amoebas so they can evolve into Dinaurians, but the Sub-Idolcomps got lost in an accident and ended up on Vivosaur Island. They didn't know about human society so they hired the BB Bandits to look for them. They all agree they have to find the Sub-Idolcomp before King Dynal. Rosie is back to normal as the portable regression ray Raptin had was weak, but excitement still triggers the effects. The Sub-Idolcomp got shattered into five fragments while traveling through time, after gathering them all Duna reveals that it's still missing its core processor. Mr. Richmond remembers a secret island that the spaceship was found on, the technologies found inside were used to revive fossils. Richmond and Diggins hid the Secret Island away to prevent the technology from falling into the wrong hands. When the Hero and Duna enter the dinaurian starship, the latter finds out that the scout ship on the first exhibition to Earth was attacked by Guhnash. In the main control room is a ''human'' with the last idol fragment in stone-sleep. Suddenly, Raptin appears and attacks the Hero to get the fragment, but the latter manages to win the battle causing Raptin to leave. The two revive Dr. Diggins back in the Fossil Center, he found the stone-sleep technology in the old ship. Returning to the Richmond building Mr. Richmond has Rosie and the Hero assemble the Sub-Idolcomp to make sure it's real, but he's actually King Dynal. He stuns all of the Hero's friends causing the latter to chase him. Back on the spaceship, the Hero suggests that the humans and Dinaurians could live on the planet together. Although Dynal considers it, Raptin, still seeing humans as their mistake, was against the idea and presses the switch, but then the Sub-Idolcomps suddenly speak. They reveal that the seeds the Dinaurians planted actually perished in the ocean and that humans originated from their own planet. They agreed to just watch them grow but the main Idolcomp wanted to destroy them, so it sent broadcast signals to Guhnash who didn't have the coordinates of Earth until the Sub-Idolcomps were returned. Upon returning to Earth, Diggins reveals that he found a sample of the monster when he went back in time, Guhnash can only be defeated by taking out its three brains. Dynal sets the teleporter to the mouth of Guhnash, it can only send one additional person for support, the Hero has the option to bring either Rosie or Duna. The two are successful in saving Earth, but the teleporter got interfered by the leaking of energy from Guhnash who is about to explode. The two use a portable stone-sleep inducer to turn them both to stone in order to protect themselves and head back to Earth. As soon he gets back, the Hero is revived but the girl he took with him met with a more unfortunate fate: if Duna was chosen her petrified state couldn't be reversed and if Rosie was chosen she lost her memories. Either way, the chieftain of the Digadig Tribe comes to help, he tells the Hero to perform a hip-shaker dance which restores the girl back to normal. |
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During the credits, the player sees what all the characters in the game are doing now. Afterwards, the Hero can take part in a series of side quests, where one includes helping Dr. Diggins build and use a time machine. |
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===Characters=== |
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*'''Hero''' (known in the official [[manga]] as '''Hunter'''): The protagonist of the game. A young boy that arrives on Vivosaur Island at the start of the game. Players can change the character's name and the colors of his outfit, but not his gender. Players also can change his face by finding or purchasing masks later in the game. |
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*'''Rosie Richmond''': A young girl with pink pigtails, matching pink skirt, and a matching pink helmet. Rosie helps the player character at various times but seems to have bad luck. She is also one of the love interests for the hero. |
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*'''Holt''': McJunker's apprentice and another Fossil Fighter. In the official manga, Holt is a big fan of V-Raptors and Rosie also has a crush on him. |
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*'''Dr. Diggins''': A tall, wiry man with glasses, blue hair, and a deep tan. The foremost scientist on Vivosaur Island, and an expert at cleaning and reviving vivosaurs. |
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*'''The B.B. Bandits''': An organization of thieves on the island. The player encounters and battles three of the members several times: Vivian, the greenish blue-haired field leader, her long-nosed subordinate Snivels, and their strange canine companion Rex. |
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*'''The Digadig Tribe''': A tribe of ancient island natives, led by a chieftain. |
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*'''Captain Woolbeard''': A ghost pirate who lives in a shipwreck in Bottomsup Bay. He wears a pink ribbon on his beard. |
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*'''Saurhead''': The reigning arena champion, a mountain of a man with a macho attitude and trademark green dinosaur mask, making him seem much like a luchador wrestler. |
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*'''Duna''': A mysterious girl (Dinaurian) with purple hair, and a deep connection to the island's past. She is also a love interest for the hero. |
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*'''Raptin''': Dinaurian elite (like Duna) with blue hair, and the character to go against Dynal's word to remove humans from earth. |
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*'''Mr. Richmond''': Rosie's Grandfather who owns Vivosaur Island. He appears frequently throughout the plot and has his own office in the Richmond Building. |
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*'''King Dynal''': The leader of the Dinaurians and the main antagonist during the second arc. |
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*'''Guhnash''': A large monster with three brains, he roams the universe for planets of life to eat whole. The Hero fights him in order to save Vivosaur Island and the Earth itself. |
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==Development== |
==Development== |
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The director Azusa Tajima and Genki Yokota from [[Nintendo SPD]] along with their entire sound staff from Nintendo worked together with [[Artdink]], [[M2 (game developer)|M2]] and [[Red Entertainment]] in the development of this game.<ref>{{cite web | date=June 20, 2009 | title=06-10-2009 Staff Credits | url=http://www.allgame.com/game.php?id=69742&tab=credits | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> In an interview with the 4-team development group, Nintendo's Hitoshi Yamagami describes the game's conception around 2004, when [[Red Entertainment]] proposed the idea of a game involving dinosaurs.<ref>{{cite web | date=June 2, 2009 | title=04-10-2008 Development Staff Interview | url=http://www.fossilfighters.com/html/making-of/2/ | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> |
The director Azusa Tajima and Genki Yokota from [[Nintendo SPD]] along with their entire sound staff from Nintendo worked together with [[Artdink]], [[M2 (game developer)|M2]] and [[Red Entertainment]] in the development of this game.<ref>{{cite web | date=June 20, 2009 | title=06-10-2009 Staff Credits | url=http://www.allgame.com/game.php?id=69742&tab=credits | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> In an interview with the 4-team development group, Nintendo's Hitoshi Yamagami describes the game's conception around 2004, when [[Red Entertainment]] proposed the idea of a game involving dinosaurs.<ref>{{cite web | date=June 2, 2009 | title=04-10-2008 Development Staff Interview | url=http://www.fossilfighters.com/html/making-of/2/ | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> |
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==Manga== |
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The official manga currently has 15 "episodes" as stated on the Fossil Fighters official website, each of which has 16 pages.{{Citation needed|date=August 2023}} |
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==Reception== |
==Reception== |
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⚫ | ''Fossil Fighters'' received a score of 32 out of 40 by the Japanese magazine ''[[Famitsu]]''.<ref>{{cite web | date=April 9, 2008 | title=04-10-2008 Famitsu Scores | url=http://www.gemaga.com/2008/04/09/04-10-2008-famitsu-scores | work=Gemaga.com | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> The game was the third best-selling game in Japan the week of its release at 35,000 copies sold.<ref>{{cite web | author=Jenkins, David | date=April 24, 2008 | title=Mario Kart Still In Pole In Japanese Charts | url=http://gamasutra.com/php-bin/news_index.php?story=18379 | work=Gamasutra.com | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> By the end of 2008, ''Fossil Fighters'' had sold 240,176 copies, making it the 15th best-selling DS game of the year in the region.<ref>{{cite web | author=Monogatari, Gaijin | date=February 13, 2009 | title=RPGamer - Japandemonium (February 13th, 2009) | url=http://www.rpgamer.com/news/japan/mb021309.html | work=RPGamer.com | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> In the United States, it sold 92,000 units in August 2009, making it the 10th best selling game for that month.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gamespot.com/ds/rpg/fossilfighters/news/6217140/npd-us-game-industry-slips-16-in-august-ps3-sales-nearly-double |title=NPD: US game industry slips 16% in August, PS3 sales nearly double |first=Tor |last=Thorsen |date=2010-10-09 |work=GameSpot |publisher=CBS Interactive |accessdate=2011-10-09 |quote=Fossil Fighter's low bar of 92,000 units didn't bode well for several titles missing from the top 10.}}</ref> |
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{{Video game reviews |
{{Video game reviews |
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| MC = 70/100<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.metacritic.com/game |
| MC = 70/100<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.metacritic.com/game/fossil-fighters/critic-reviews/?platform=ds |title=Fossil Fighters for DS Reviews |website=[[Metacritic]] |publisher=[[CBS Interactive]] |access-date=2021-10-10}}</ref> |
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| IGN = 5.9/10<ref>{{cite web |last1=Harris |first1=Craig |title=Fossil Fighters Review |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2009/08/18/fossil-fighters-review |website=[[IGN]] |date=18 August 2009 |access-date=10 October 2021}}</ref> |
| IGN = 5.9/10<ref>{{cite web |last1=Harris |first1=Craig |title=Fossil Fighters Review |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2009/08/18/fossil-fighters-review |website=[[IGN]] |date=18 August 2009 |access-date=10 October 2021}}</ref> |
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| NLife = {{Rating|7|10}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Dillard |first1=Corbe |title=Fossil Fighters Review (DS) |url=https://www.nintendolife.com/reviews/2009/08/fossil_fighters_ds |website=[[Nintendo Life]] |date=30 August 2009 |access-date=10 October 2021}}</ref> |
| NLife = {{Rating|7|10}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Dillard |first1=Corbe |title=Fossil Fighters Review (DS) |url=https://www.nintendolife.com/reviews/2009/08/fossil_fighters_ds |website=[[Nintendo Life]] |date=30 August 2009 |access-date=10 October 2021}}</ref> |
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⚫ | ''Fossil Fighters'' received a score of 32 out of 40 by the Japanese magazine ''[[Famitsu]]''.<ref>{{cite web | date=April 9, 2008 | title=04-10-2008 Famitsu Scores | url=http://www.gemaga.com/2008/04/09/04-10-2008-famitsu-scores | work=Gemaga.com | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> The game was the third best-selling game in Japan the week of its release at 35,000 copies sold.<ref>{{cite web | author=Jenkins, David | date=April 24, 2008 | title=Mario Kart Still In Pole In Japanese Charts | url=http://gamasutra.com/php-bin/news_index.php?story=18379 | work=Gamasutra.com | accessdate=2009-08-01}}</ref> By the end of 2008, ''Fossil Fighters'' had sold 240,176 copies, making it the 15th best-selling DS game of the year in the region.<ref>{{cite web | author=Monogatari, Gaijin | date=February 13, 2009 | title=RPGamer - Japandemonium (February 13th, 2009) | url=http://www.rpgamer.com/news/japan/mb021309.html | work=RPGamer.com | accessdate=2009-08-01 | archive-date=2009-08-31 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090831012416/http://www.rpgamer.com/news/japan/mb021309.html | url-status=dead }}</ref> In the United States, it sold 92,000 units in August 2009, making it the 10th best selling game for that month.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gamespot.com/ds/rpg/fossilfighters/news/6217140/npd-us-game-industry-slips-16-in-august-ps3-sales-nearly-double |title=NPD: US game industry slips 16% in August, PS3 sales nearly double |first=Tor |last=Thorsen |date=2010-10-09 |work=GameSpot |publisher=CBS Interactive |accessdate=2011-10-09 |quote=Fossil Fighter's low bar of 92,000 units didn't bode well for several titles missing from the top 10.}}</ref> |
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⚫ | In America, ''Fossil Fighters'' scores averaged between 7 and 8. Reviewers generally praised the game for being fun, having simple yet surprisingly addictive cleaning while having battles that were somewhat enjoyable. While most reviewers compared it to the ''[[Pokémon (video game series)|Pokémon]]'' video game series, some reviewers like GameSpot didn't mind, saying that they might as well borrow from the best, while others didn't bring it up much. Reviewers found game elements like graphics and music overall lacking, and some reviewers, like IGN (who gave the game a 5.3), knocked the game for being repetitive and too ''Pokémon''-like.<ref>{{Cite web|date=18 Aug 2009|title=Fossil Fighters Review|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2009/08/18/fossil-fighters-review |
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⚫ | In America, ''Fossil Fighters'' scores averaged between 7 and 8. Reviewers generally praised the game for being fun, having simple yet surprisingly addictive cleaning while having battles that were somewhat enjoyable. While most reviewers compared it to the ''[[Pokémon (video game series)|Pokémon]]'' video game series, some reviewers like GameSpot didn't mind, saying that they might as well borrow from the best, while others didn't bring it up much. Reviewers found game elements like graphics and music overall lacking, and some reviewers, like IGN (who gave the game a 5.3), knocked the game for being repetitive and too ''Pokémon''-like.<ref>{{Cite web|date=18 Aug 2009|title=Fossil Fighters Review|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2009/08/18/fossil-fighters-review|access-date=2021-07-12|website=[[IGN]]|language=en}}</ref> |
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== Notes == |
== Notes == |
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[[Category:Video games set on fictional islands]] |
[[Category:Video games set on fictional islands]] |
Latest revision as of 18:02, 17 September 2024
Fossil Fighters | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Nintendo SPD Red Entertainment M2 Artdink |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo |
Composer(s) | Asuka Ito Megumi Inoue Daisuke Shiiba |
Series | Fossil Fighters |
Platform(s) | Nintendo DS |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Role-playing video game |
Mode(s) | Single-player, Multiplayer |
Fossil Fighters, known as We Are Fossil Diggers[a] in Japan,[2] is a 2008 video game developed by Nintendo SPD, Red Entertainment, M2, and Artdink and published by Nintendo. It was first released in Japan on April 17, 2008, and was later released in North America on August 10, 2009,[1] and in Australia on September 17, 2009.[3]
A sequel titled Super Kasekihoridā,[4] was released in Japan on November 18, 2010.[5] It was released outside Japan, originally titled as Super Fossil Fighters, but changed to Fossil Fighters: Champions, released in North America on November 14, 2011. A Nintendo 3DS entry, Fossil Fighters: Frontier, was released in Japan in February 2014,[6] and in North America in 2015.[7]
Gameplay
[edit]The central concept of Fossil Fighters is the revival of prehistoric fossils into supernatural forms known as "vivosaurs", charged with elemental energy, and the use of these creatures in combat against each other.
The player accesses regions called "dig sites" and collects "Fossil Rocks", each of which contains one-quarter of a dinosaur's skeleton; head, body, arms, or legs. Fossil Rocks are scanned and cleaned at a "Revival Machine" and then incorporated into a vivosaur. Although a vivosaur can be revived using only a head fossil, integrating the other three parts will grant it bonus strength and access to additional abilities. If the secondary parts are found without a head, they will be stored until the head is found and subsequently integrated into the vivosaur.
Cleaning a Fossil Rock involves removing the rock around the fossil with a hammer, and then the remaining layer of dirt with a drill. The player has 90 seconds to accomplish this task and risks damaging the fossil by hitting it directly with the hammer or drill. A cleaner and less damaged fossil grants more strength to the vivosaur it is integrated into.
Vivosaurs with a head fossil integrated are used in turn-based combat against opposing vivosaurs. Up to three of the player's vivosaurs may challenge up to three of an opponent's. Each team has access to one Attack Zone, two Support Zones and one Escape Zone; their starting positions are in the Attack and Support Zones. Vivosaurs can use attacks and other abilities by expending Fossil Power (FP) gained at the start of each turn. Fossil Power can also be conserved between turns in an attempt to expend a large amount on a strong attack. Two turns’ worth of Fossil Power is added to a combatant's pool if one of their vivosaurs runs out of Life Points (LP) and is defeated. LP also decides who is first to attack in a battle, in which the team with the lowest total LP goes first. The battle is over when all of an opponent's vivosaurs are defeated.
The basic strategy of Fossil Fighters is to use attacks with an Attack Zone vivosaur while Support Zone vivosaurs apply statistical bonuses to the player's Attack Zone or statistical penalties to the enemy's Attack Zone. However, Fossil Fighters contains much strategic diversity. A damaged Attack Zone vivosaur may be "escaped" to the Escape Zone when weakened, but a Support Zone vivosaur must enter the Attack Zone and take its place. The now-empty Support Zone will be filled by the escaped vivosaur in two turns.
Fossil Fighters uses a system of elemental balance where each vivosaur has an elemental affinity: Fire is weak to Water, Water is weak to Air, Air is weak to Earth, Earth is weak to Fire, and Neutral-element vivosaurs have no elemental strength or weakness. Certain mythical vivosaurs, only granted to the player in special circumstances, are of the "Legendary" element, which functions identically to Neutral-element vivosaurs.
Plot
[edit]After arriving on Vivosaur Island, the Hero confronts a thief and encounters a young girl named Rosie, whose Dino Medals were stolen. After defeating him, the Hero discovers a mysterious idol.
Soon after, the Hero gains access to Knotwood Forest, and helps its inhabitants, the Digadig tribe, defend their treasures from the BB Bandits. During his journey, the Hero gets two more idols, fighting the BB Bandits along the way. A mysterious girl named Duna appears to be following him.
The next day, Rosie is kidnapped by the BB Bandits, the Hero offers the idols in exchange for her safety. After battling Rex, Snivels, and Vivian, the BB Bandits' leader is revealed to be Police Chief Bartholomew Bullwort. The Hero succeeds in getting him arrested and saving Rosie. Meanwhile, Rosie's grandfather, Mr. Richmond, suspects that the bandits were hired to steal the idols.
Dr. Diggins requests that the Hero search for an idol near Mt. Lavaflow. After he finds the idol, Duna demands him to give it to her, and she is revealed to be a dinosaur-like alien called a Dinaurian. After Duna runs off, Rosie meets up with the Hero and they find that the BB Bandits have taken over Vivosaur Island. Bullwort captures the Hero and Rosie, but Rex, Snivels, and Vivian, no longer wanting to take orders from him, help the two escape. The Digadig chief reveals that Bullwort's vivosaur, Frigisaurus, was rivals with another legendary vivosaur known as the Ignosaurus, whom they revive to help defeat it.
The next day, Duna and another Dinaurian named Raptin arrive to take the idols and reveal them to be Sub-Idolcomps, which are intended to wipe out humanity. Using Raptin's device, the Hero and Diggins infiltrate the ship and find the Sub-Idolcomps connected to a larger Idolcomp as the Dinaurian king, Dynal, reveals Project: Mother Planet, their plan to revert humans to amoebas and start over. Dynal tells Duna to press the switch, but she refuses, having learned the good of humanity. Dynal is furious at her betrayal and presses the switch himself, but Diggins causes it to malfunction, sending himself and the Sub-Idolcomp back in time to the Jurassic period. Dynal attempts to kill the Hero and Duna, but the two teleport to safety.
Duna reveals to Richmond that the goal of Project: Mother Planet is to recreate the Dinaurian's home planet, as the planet-eating Guhnash destroyed it. Additionally, the Dinaurians created humanity using seeds derived from their own DNA, with the Idolcomp having been created to monitor evolution and enable humans to evolve into Dinaurians. However, the Sub-Idolcomps were lost in an accident and ended up on Vivosaur Island, so the Dinaurians hired the BB Bandits to search for them. Dynal's Sub-Idolcomp was shattered into five fragments while traveling through time; after gathering them, Duna reveals that it is missing its core processor, which is located in the Dinaurian ship. Raptin appears and attacks the Hero to get the fragment, but the latter is victorious.
The two revive Diggins back in the Fossil Center, with him having found stone-sleep technology in the ship and used it to survive into the present. Back on the spaceship, the Sub-Idolcomps reveal that the Dinaurians' seeds died in the ocean and that humans originated from their own planet. While the Sub-Idolcomps liked them, the Main Idolcomp wanted to destroy them, so it instead sent a signal to Guhnash to have him devour Earth. Upon returning to Earth, Dynal helps the Hero teleport to fight Guhnash, but he can only send one additional person for support, with the Hero having to choose either Rosie or Duna. The two save Earth, but Guhnash's energy interferes with the teleporter, so the two use stone-sleep to survive the return to Earth. Upon returning, the Hero is revived, but his companion is not: if Duna was chosen, her petrification is seemingly irreversible, and if Rosie was chosen, she loses her memories. However, the Digadig chief teaches the Hero a dance that restores her to normal.
Development
[edit]The director Azusa Tajima and Genki Yokota from Nintendo SPD along with their entire sound staff from Nintendo worked together with Artdink, M2 and Red Entertainment in the development of this game.[8] In an interview with the 4-team development group, Nintendo's Hitoshi Yamagami describes the game's conception around 2004, when Red Entertainment proposed the idea of a game involving dinosaurs.[9]
Reception
[edit]Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
Metacritic | 70/100[10] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
GameSpot | 7.5/10[13] |
GamesRadar+ | [14] |
IGN | 5.9/10[11] |
Nintendo Life | [12] |
Nintendo World Report | 7/10[15] |
Fossil Fighters received a score of 32 out of 40 by the Japanese magazine Famitsu.[16] The game was the third best-selling game in Japan the week of its release at 35,000 copies sold.[17] By the end of 2008, Fossil Fighters had sold 240,176 copies, making it the 15th best-selling DS game of the year in the region.[18] In the United States, it sold 92,000 units in August 2009, making it the 10th best selling game for that month.[19]
In America, Fossil Fighters scores averaged between 7 and 8. Reviewers generally praised the game for being fun, having simple yet surprisingly addictive cleaning while having battles that were somewhat enjoyable. While most reviewers compared it to the Pokémon video game series, some reviewers like GameSpot didn't mind, saying that they might as well borrow from the best, while others didn't bring it up much. Reviewers found game elements like graphics and music overall lacking, and some reviewers, like IGN (who gave the game a 5.3), knocked the game for being repetitive and too Pokémon-like.[20]
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b East, Tom (4 June 2009). "E3: Nintendo Reveal Fossil Fighters". Official Nintendo Magazine. Nintendo. Archived from the original on 12 August 2009. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
- ^ "The Making of Fossil Fighters - Developer Interviews | Nintendo DS Game". Archived from the original on August 10, 2009. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
- ^ "Fossil Fighters". Nintendo (Australia). Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
- ^ RawmeatCowboy (9 September 2010). "Fossil Fighters getting a sequel". GoNintendo. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
- ^ "Super Kasekihoridā". Nintendo (Japan).
- ^ "カセキホリダー ムゲンギア". www.nintendo.co.jp.
- ^ Nintendo (2014-06-11), Nintendo 3DS - Fossil Fighters: Frontier E3 2014 Trailer, retrieved 2016-10-02
- ^ "06-10-2009 Staff Credits". June 20, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
- ^ "04-10-2008 Development Staff Interview". June 2, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
- ^ "Fossil Fighters for DS Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
- ^ Harris, Craig (18 August 2009). "Fossil Fighters Review". IGN. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ Dillard, Corbe (30 August 2009). "Fossil Fighters Review (DS)". Nintendo Life. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ Petit, Carolyn (18 August 2009). "Fossil Fighters Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ Sykes, Tom (2 September 2009). "Fossil Fighters review". GamesRadar. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ Jones, James (28 September 2009). "Fossil Fighters Review". Nintendo World Report. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
- ^ "04-10-2008 Famitsu Scores". Gemaga.com. April 9, 2008. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
- ^ Jenkins, David (April 24, 2008). "Mario Kart Still In Pole In Japanese Charts". Gamasutra.com. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
- ^ Monogatari, Gaijin (February 13, 2009). "RPGamer - Japandemonium (February 13th, 2009)". RPGamer.com. Archived from the original on 2009-08-31. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
- ^ Thorsen, Tor (2010-10-09). "NPD: US game industry slips 16% in August, PS3 sales nearly double". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2011-10-09.
Fossil Fighter's low bar of 92,000 units didn't bode well for several titles missing from the top 10.
- ^ "Fossil Fighters Review". IGN. 18 Aug 2009. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
External links
[edit]- Official website Archived 2009-07-24 at the Wayback Machine (in English)
- Official website (in Japanese)