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Story of Eastern Wonderland: Difference between revisions

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(Adding the title screen into a gallery section... tell me if you don't like it)
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==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Th02titlescreen.jpg|Title screen
File:Th02titlescreen.jpg|The game's title screen
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</gallery>



Revision as of 15:23, 4 June 2014

東方封魔録 (とうほうふうまろく)
the Story of Eastern Wonderland
the Story of Eastern Wonderland
Developer

ZUN Soft

Publisher

Amusement Makers

Released

Full: August 15, 1997 (Comiket 52)

Genre

Vertical Danmaku Shooting Game

Gameplay

Single-Player Story Mode

Platforms

PC-98 (NEC PC-9800 / EPSON PC-486/586)

Requirements
  • Intel 486 33MHz
  • 2MB hard disk, EGC
  • PC-9801-86 (FM SOUND BOARD)
  • 520k RAM
  • SC-88 or equivalent recommended for MIDI playback

Touhou Fumaroku ~ the Story of Eastern Wonderland (東方封魔録 ~ the Story of Eastern Wonderland[1], lit. "Eastern Recorded Sealing of a Demon") is the second game in the Touhou Project. It is also the first game in the curtain-fire shooting genre, and was released for the PC-98 series of computers in 1997. The game features Marisa Kirisame and Mima as enemies.

The resident shrine maiden Reimu Hakurei returns from a "training" session in the mountains only to find the Hakurei Shrine overrun by a legion of ghosts and youkai. Excited at the opportunity to test her fledgling abilities, she takes the powerful Yin-Yang Orbs and hurries off on the back of her turtle Genjii to seek out the source of the invasion.

Gameplay

the Story of Eastern Wonderland casts the player as the Shrine Maiden Reimu Hakurei and offers three distinct attack types to choose from: a wide-range type with weak attack power, a mid-range type with moderate attack power and auto-targeting capabilities, and a narrow-range type with high attack power but lowered movement speed. The bombs also exhibit unique behavior depending on the type chosen.

As the first danmaku shooting game in the Touhou Project, the Story of Eastern Wonderland introduces many features that are now hallmarks of the series as a whole: relatively small hit boxes, boss characters who are not much larger than the player character however are highly mobile, a power-up system, variable-worth point items, an unlockable Extra Stage, and a semi-complex scoring system. The game also marks the first appearance of Marisa Kirisame, who would become a major character in the series, appearing as often as Reimu Hakurei herself.

Concept

The game itself was designed to stand alongside The Highly Responsive to Prayers at Comiket 52. ZUN, rather haughtily, states that it is supposed to be a danmaku game with so many bullets that not even DoDonPachi, a popular shooting game at the time, would compare - by having more bullets, but an even smaller hitbox. Much of the stage design was apparently influenced by Darius Gaiden, an entry in a series that ZUN usually cites as one of his main inspirations.

Before the game was released at Comiket 52, ZUN was already working on Phantasmagoria of Dim.Dream.

Story

The story involves Reimu's investigation of monsters that appeared suddenly at the Hakurei Shrine. This time around, she takes two Yin-Yang Orbs, and her turtle servant Genjii in order to fly. She encounters Rika with her FLower Tank and Meira who want to fight Reimu for personal reasons. She then travels through the Dream World, which is between Gensokyo and Makai, and defeats the Five Magic Stones in order to reach Reimaden, which is where she meets Marisa Kirisame and re-encounters Mima. Marisa appears to be the ghost's servant. Mima disappears after suffering a defeat by Reimu's hand, but the monsters and spirits around the shrine don't seem to have gone away.

During the extra stage, Rika attacks once more, this time with her new tank Evil Eye Sigma. After defeating the engineer, Reimu returns to the shrine to find the monsters gone.

Music

The original game included fifteen tracks, in the format most often seen by later games in the series: a theme for each stage, a theme for each boss, a title screen theme, an ending theme, and a staff roll theme. All were included in the music room in the game, which included the names of the tracks as well, and the name of each track appears in the bottom right whenever it plays in-game; ZUN states that this was influenced by Metal Black, a 1991 horizontally-scrolling shmup by Taito.

This is the only PC-98 game to include two vastly different versions of it's soundtrack, a FM version and a MIDI version, which can be selected in the option menu. The MIDI version, not limited by the 6-voice polyphony of the built-in PC-9801-26 sound board, includes additional voices, melodies and phrases in many songs. However, it requires an external MIDI synthesizer for playback, which will also determine it's sound quality. All later appearances of the music are based on the FM version.

In the music room of Mystic Square, ZUN includes three unused songs that didn't make it into the final version. The fifteen main tracks and these three unused songs later appear in Akyu's Untouched Score vol.3. In addition, three songs that were in the game were named differently on ZUN's old website for the PMD versions of the songs. Legendary Wonderland (昔話わんだらーんど) was renamed to Crossing the Blue Sky (青空超えて), Extra Love was renamed Crazy Magic, and 戦車むすめのみるゆめ (The Tank Girl's Dream) was rewritten to be 戦車娘のみるゆめ.

Press

the Story of Eastern Wonderland was released alongside The Highly Responsive to Prayers at Comiket 52. Since the first game had been complete since sometime in 1995, it is unknown how long ZUN worked on this one for.

Akyu's Untouched Score vol.3 was released later at Comiket 71 at the end of 2006, which included all eighteen tracks.

On September 19, 2002, all the five PC-98 games have officially stopped being sold, a little after the Embodiment of Scarlet Devil was released.

  • An unofficial English patch was released at some time for this game, though it's somewhat incomplete.

Gallery

External links

Official

Unofficial

References

  1. The game itself doesn't have a solid subtitle, except for the phrase The Story of "HUMA" in Eastern Wonderland. The subtitle "the Story of Eastern Wonderland" was later given to it on ZUN's archives site as well as Akyu's Untouched Score vol.3.