Tokyo Jungle

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Tokyo Jungle
Tokyo Jungle Official Cover Art.png
Developer(s) Crispy's! [1]
Publisher(s) Sony Computer Entertainment [2]
Director(s) Yohei Kataoka
Producer(s) Masaaki Yamagiwa
Composer(s) Taku Sakakibara
Platform(s) PlayStation 3
PlayStation Vita
ReleasePlayStation 3
  • JP: June 7, 2012
  • NA: September 25, 2012
  • PAL: September 26, 2012
Tokyo Jungle Mobile
PlayStation Vita
  • WW: July 10, 2013
Genre(s) Action [3]
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Tokyo Jungle [lower-alpha 1] is a survival action game developed by Crispy's! and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 3. [4] The game takes place in a deserted, futuristic Tokyo, in which the city has transformed into a vicious wildlife wasteland. [4]

Contents

Tokyo Jungle was released in Japan on June 7, 2012, [5] available on both disc and downloadable versions. The international release of the game became available for download via PSN in North America and the PAL region on September 25 and September 26, 2012, respectively. [6] It was included on the "Best of PlayStation Network Vol. 1" compilation disc, released in NTSC regions on June 18, 2013. [7]

On July 10, 2013, a grid-based version of the game titled Tokyo Jungle Mobile was released on PlayStation Mobile for the PlayStation Vita. [8]

Gameplay

Tokyo Jungle has two modes: Story and Survival. [2]

The player will have to build up a pack of animals. This is easier for some herbivores, which means the player may not necessarily be at a disadvantage even if they choose a weaker type. [1] There are 50 breeds and 80 types of animals in the game, [1] including Pomeranians, lions, crocodiles, tigers, giraffes, hippos, cheetahs, chimpanzees, gazelles, chickens, Beagles, Dilophosaurus , hyenas, Deinonychus , and Sika deer. [2] As the player plays through the game, additional playable animals are unlocked. [1] There are other animals which are available for the player to download as downloadable content from the PlayStation Store, which include an Australian Silky Terrier, a Smilodon, a robot dog, a Peking Man, a (human) office worker, white and black Pomeranians, a cat, a panda, a crocodile, a kangaroo, and a giraffe.

Plot

Some time in the twenty-first century, humankind is extinct, leaving animals to fend for themselves. The once busy streets of Tokyo are now home to lions, tigers, chickens, and various other animals. All of them are now fighting for survival. [2]

Development

Director Yohei Kataoka wanted to make a game that felt original, noting that animals and a world without humans were both individually "universal" concepts that could be combined to create something "very catchy, very new and very exciting." [9] [10] After coming up with the setting, Kataoka's team prototyped the concept, with Kataoka drawing animals over photos of an abandoned Tokyo. The team also created a 2D "pitch" video which helped them unify the concept. [9] The team began with only two people, but had expanded to 24 by the end of development. [9] Rather than move into a dedicated office, the team instead worked from a 1,000 square foot home. Electrical issues forced the studio to upgrade the residence, ultimately costing them roughly the same as if they had moved into an office in the first place. [9] Kataoka feels that the team's inexperience in designing games helped the final product, specifically noting that they wouldn't have opted to put so many characters into the game had they realized the work that such a feat entailed. [9]

Japan Studio and Sony Worldwide Studios both criticized the project upon first hearing about it with Kataoka believing that the former balked at the concept. Sony Worldwide Studios was open to the idea, but felt that the gameplay at that stage was lacking. [10]

The game made its debut at the 2010 Tokyo Game Show, with GameSpot writing that the game's quirky concept "make it unlikely to ever see a stateside release". [11] Sony noted on their own Playstation Blog that most of the early coverage focused on the eccentric concept as opposed to the gameplay. [10] Kataoka noted that he himself was unsure by this point if the game would ever see a release outside of Japan, although interest from European gamers eventually led to a worldwide release. [10]

Reception

Tokyo Jungle received "average" reviews, while Tokyo Jungle Mobile received "generally favorable reviews", according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. [13] [12]

Ellie Gibson, writing for Eurogamer , described the game as "basically Grand Theft Auto with lions" and called it "a celebration of classic games, with their ridiculous plots, repetitive tasks, excessive violence and all. It pulls off the impressive and nigh-on impossible trick of being an original homage." [16] Giant Bomb's Patrick Klepek also praised the game, calling it a "well-designed, supremely funny game". Klepek went on to praise the game's animal variety and the system for unlocking new animals, as well as the loot system and the story mode. However, he criticized the game's inclusion of certain animals as paid downloadable content. [23] In Japan, Famitsu gave it a score of all four eights for a total of 32 out of 40. [17]

The Digital Fix said that "The mechanics are simple, graphics average, plotting ludicrous but it is never dull and if you don't have a story to tell your gamer friends after every time you play it then you are doing it wrong." [30] The Escapist similarly said it was "utterly ridiculous but wholly unique, blending challenging gameplay with goofy trappings. ... The mixture of absurd and serious is addictive and surprising." [31] The Guardian said that, "Despite its tongue-in-cheek nature, Tokyo Jungle is a superb game. It feels quite unlike anything else (the best description of it would be a stealth-action-survival-RPG), it's laugh-out-loud funny and incredibly moreish." [29] Anime News Network called it "a low-key experience where you can do approximately three things (eat, sleep, and mate). There isn't much in the way of cutscenes and there isn't much in the way of story ... and [it is] about as good an experience of harrowed persistence as any game is likely to give." [32] However, Digital Spy gave it three stars out of five and called it "a unique title which, while not without its flaws, is wildly entertaining..." [28] The same website also gave the Vita version four stars out of five, saying, "Fans of the original will still probably be willing to look past Tokyo Jungle Mobile's awkward controls and less involved combat, and if they do they will find much of the same addicting survival gameplay intact hiding underneath." [27]

In an interview with Siliconera, director Yohei Kataoka was asked about Tokyo Jungle's reception outside Japan: "Europe loved it, and we got a lot of great feedback from that audience, but [in] America... that simply wasn't the case. We received a lot of negative feedback for the game." [33]

Notes

  1. Japanese: トーキョー ジャングル, Hepburn: Tōkyō Janguru

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Further reading