Difference between revisions of "Bloxeed"

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{{stub}}'''''Bloxeed''''' (ブロクシード) is a 1989 arcade puzzle game by [[Sega]] based on the gameplay seen in ''[[Tetris]]''. It was first released exclusively in Japan on [[System 18]] hardware before Sega ported it to their [[System C]] hardware for international release (and was the first System C game to be released).
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{{sub-stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' (ブロクシード) is a 1989 arcade puzzle game by [[Sega]] based on the gameplay seen in ''[[Tetris]]''. It was first released exclusively in Japan on [[System 18]] hardware before Sega ported it to their [[System C]] hardware for international release (and was the first System C game to be released).
  
 
==Gameplay==
 
==Gameplay==

Revision as of 19:30, 13 July 2018

n/a

Bloxeed System18TitleScreen.png

Bloxeed
System(s): System 18, System 16, System C
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Genre: Puzzle

















Release Date RRP Code
Arcade (System 16)
JP
¥? ?
Arcade (System 18)
JP
¥? ?
Arcade (System C)
JP
¥? ?
Arcade (System C)
US
$? ?





























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Bloxeed (ブロクシード) is a 1989 arcade puzzle game by Sega based on the gameplay seen in Tetris. It was first released exclusively in Japan on System 18 hardware before Sega ported it to their System C hardware for international release (and was the first System C game to be released).

Gameplay

Bloxeed is an extension of the Tetris formula. The objective remains the same - to clear lines with falling tetromino pieces, however Bloxeed expands the ways in which to do so by introducing "power blocks" - blocks with letters or numbers printed on them. If a cleared line contains a power block, the player is rewarded with a power-up:

Bloxeed sprites.png
Flicky
By pressing one of the rotate buttons, players can drop blocks directly below Flicky (from Flicky). Like tetrominoes, Flicky falls one row at a time.
Bloxeed sprites.png
Satellite
By pressing one of the rotate buttons, players can shoot at and clear blocks directly below a satellite. This is similar to Flicky, but in reverse.
Bloxeed sprites.png
Bomb
Destroy a chunk of blocks.
Bloxeed sprites.png
16 Ton
Destroy three adjacent columns of blocks.
Bloxeed sprites.png
4 Lines
Clear four randomly-selected rows, regardless of how complete they are.

After a certain period of time, an incomplete row is added to the bottom of the field. In two-player mode, clearing two or more rows will knock whatever piece is currently falling in your opponent's play area out and send two incomplete rows back at them.

History

Legacy

Likely due to complications regarding Tetris licenses in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Bloxeed was not ported to any home platforms, as Sega lacked a license in order to do so.

Many years later the game was packaged with Tetris and Flash Point in Sega Ages 2500 Series Vol. 28: Tetris Collection.

Magazine articles

Main article: Bloxeed/Magazine articles.

Physical scans

System 18 version

System 18, JP

System C version

System C, US
System C, JP

System 16 version

System 18, JP

References




Tetris and Tetris-like games for Sega systems/developed by Sega
Sega: Tetris (1989) | Flash Point (Mega Drive) (1989) | Bloxeed (1989) | Sega Tetris (1999) | Sega Ages 2500 Series Vol. 28: Tetris Collection (2006) | Tetris Giant (2010) | Puyo Puyo Tetris (2014) | Puyo Puyo Tetris 2 (2020)
Third-Party: Blockout (1991) | Tetris Plus (1996) | Tetris S (1996) | Tetris 4D (1998) | The Next Tetris: On-Line Edition (2000) | Tetris Kiwamemichi (2004) | Tetris The Grand Master 4: The Masters of Round (unreleased)
Unlicensed: Super Columns (1990) | Super Tetris (19xx) | Flashpoint (19xx)
Tetris related media
Music
Tetremix (1989) | Flash Point/Bloxeed (1990) | New Century (2006) | Puyo Puyo Tetris 1 & 2 Original Soundtrack (2020)